Director and CEO, Burnet Institute, Burnet Institute
Professor Brendan Crabb AC PhD FAHMS FASM is an infectious disease researcher with a special interest in viruses and protozoan parasites, especially malaria. His research group develops and exploits genetic approaches to better understand malaria parasite biology, principally to help prioritise vaccine and drug targets.
Although a molecular scientist by training, Professor Crabb’s interests include addressing technical and non-technical barriers to maternal, newborn and child health in the developing world. In recent years, under the banner of Healthy Mothers Healthy Babies, he has established a major research field site in East New Britain in Papua New Guinea, principally to identify the underlying drivers (including malaria) of low birth weight and stunting in relatively calorie-rich, yet resource-poor settings.
Since 2008 he has been the Director and CEO of the Macfarlane Burnet Institute for Medical Research and Public Health (Burnet Institute), a research institute that has a focus entirely on the health of neglected populations. He is the past-President of the Association of Australian Medical Research Institutes (AAMRI), the peak body for independent medical research Institutes in Australia. Professor Crabb has played roles in transformative government policy and funding initiatives, including in the generation of the Medical Research Future Fund.
He is currently a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Health and Medical Sciences (FAHMS) and of the Australian Society for Microbiology (FASM), serves on the governing Council of the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia and on the National COVID-19 Health Research Advisory Committee.
He is the President of the Pacific Friends of Global Health (advocating for GAVI, the Vaccine Alliance, The Global Fund for AIDS, TB and Malaria and Unitaid), and a founding board member of the Global Health Alliance.
He serves on the International Advisory Boards of the Sanger Institute (UK) and on the WHO Malaria Vaccine Advisory Committee (MALVAC) in Geneva. Professor Crabb was the Co-Founder of the 1st Malaria World Congress and of the Molecular Approaches to Malaria Conferences. In his home state of Victoria, is President of the Victorian Chapter of AAMRI.
Prior to 2008, Professor Crabb was a Senior Principal Research Fellow in the NHMRC and an International Fellow of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute in the US. He is an experienced educator having been a full-time teaching and research academic at the University of Melbourne (1996-2000) and has been involved in education at secondary and tertiary levels ever since.
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