Registration now open for this year's NHMRC Research Translation Symposium (& our Living Evidence satellite event)

Registration is now open for the 10th NHMRC Research Translation Symposium and details of the program, including plenary sessions, speakers and a range of local satellite events, are now available. There's no fee to register, but spaces are limited so it's advisable to get in early!

The theme this year is 'Embracing Diversity', and the intention is to encourage the translation of research that improves equity and respects the health and health care decision making needs of people of different cultures, ethnic groups, socio-economic groups, abilities or ages. It includes (but is not limited to):

  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples

  • people who live in rural and remote areas

  • culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) communities

  • people living with disability.

The Symposium is a hybrid event, and features a combination of keynote/plenary, abstract and panel sessions, with face-to-face elements to enable local/ regional in-person networking. 

As part of this program, Cochrane Australia and the Australian Living Evidence Consortium are hosting a Living Evidence Live satellite session on Monday 21 November 2022 from 11am – 12pm at the School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Ground floor, 553 St Kilda Road, Melbourne.

Symposium delegates are invited to join us in person for a Q&A session exploring all things living evidence. Learn more about the Australian Living Evidence Consortium, find out about the Living Guidelines in Health Care Handbook, meet ALEC members, and ask your Living Guidelines questions to a panel of experts. Following that, we can watch the afternoon plenary session together, and share a light lunch.

Further details and online registration for this and other satellite events are available on the NHMRC Research Translation Symposium website.

Previous
Previous

Big news! Cochrane's first ever open access journal launched today

Next
Next

New Living Guidelines Handbook now available