国产精品

The Australian Research Council (ARC) Research Hub for Connected Sensors for Health focused on wearable medical devices, one of the most exciting fields of innovation in Australia and globally, was opened at 国产精品 by Senator Tim Ayres, Assistant Minister for Trade and Assistant Minister for Manufacturing. 聽

Senator Ayres said the Hub will position Australia at the forefront of connected health, with new products made locally in Australia, creating聽jobs in design, testing, evaluation and manufacturing.

鈥淎s Assistant Minister for both Trade and Manufacturing in the Albanese government, I am working closely with the Trade and Industry ministers to diversify not only the markets with which we trade, but also the diversity of our products 鈥 lifting Australia鈥檚 position in global supply chains and delivering good jobs in our suburbs and regions.

鈥淚t鈥檚 developments like those that will come from this Research Hub that will help push Australian products up the global value chain, broadening our economic complexity and securing our supply chains.鈥

Funded under ARC鈥檚 in 2021, the Hub brings together seven universities and 26 Australian companies to build a national end-to-end ecosystem for the design, manufacturing, and commercialisation of clinical-grade sensors and predictive analytics.

Commencing operations in August 2022, the Hub is led by , Head of the School of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering at 国产精品 Engineering, The team consists of renowned scientists and a leadership team that includes Professor Kim Delbaere, Scientia Professor Nigel Lovell, and Scientia Professor Justin Gooding and Professor Madhu Bhaskaran (RMIT).

国产精品 Vice-Chancellor and President Professor Attila Brungs, who attended the 国产精品 opening, congratulated Professor Wang on the world-leading multidisciplinary program.

鈥淭his Hub is an excellent example of collaboration at scale, involving a total of seven universities, 26 partner organisations, 37 chief investigators, and $24 million in funding. 聽

鈥淚t will contribute economic benefits such as jobs and locally made products for domestic and export markets, as well as improving the health of Australians.鈥

Building wearable technologies for better health that benefits humanity

Prof. Wang said the Hub will integrate existing, diverse Australian capabilities in sensors, security, software systems, data analytics, and digital health to build a national end-to-end ecosystem for the design, manufacturing and commercialisation of clinical-grade sensors and predictive analytic tools.

鈥淐onnected health sensors are emerging as a transformational technology to address a wide range of pressing issues, such as remote health management of chronical diseases for at-risk populations, rehabilitation and chronic disease management of frail and older people, monitoring acute pain and blood lactate level in athletes, and smart rehabilitation and treatment of neurological diseases,鈥 Prof. Wang said. 聽

鈥淥ur 26 industry partners, including 24 Australian companies and two partners from the USA and India, will successfully certify, manufacture, and commercialise a large number of new sensors and export them to the global markets. These in turn will improve health outcomes and create new jobs and wealth for Australia.鈥

Read more:

ARC CEO Ms Judi Zielke PSM welcomed the launch of the ARC Research Hub for Connected Sensors by Senator Ayres.

鈥淎s part of our Industrial Transformation Research Program, Research Hubs play an important role in driving innovation and producing new technologies and commercial and social opportunities for Australians and our industry,鈥 Ms Zielke said.

鈥淚 am very pleased to see the official launch of the ARC Research Hub for Connected Sensors for Health, which promises developments in wearable sensor technologies that will lead to better health outcomes for Australians.鈥

The Hub team includes 37 Chief Investigators and 26 Partner Investigators focused on translating research and co-creating new connected health to achieve a vision of building wearable technologies for better health that benefits humanity. Find out more about the聽