Dr Alexia Murphy Receives World Cancer Research Fund International Academy Fellowship

By Petrina Smith
Wednesday, 20 August, 2014


A career devoted to improving the health and nutrition of children with cancer has earnt University of Queensland researcher Dr Alexia Murphy  a prestigious World Cancer Research Fund International Academy Fellowship.


Dr Murphy, from the Children’s Nutrition Research Centre at the Queensland Children’s Medical Research Institute, is the only Australian among the six people worldwide receiving the fellowship.
She will join world-class nutrition researchers, scientists and speakers at a two-week course on nutritional epidemiology at Imperial College London later this year.
“Attending this course will improve my skills in nutrition epidemiology studies and help me to combine an international perspective with my current knowledge and research focus,” Dr Murphy said
Her studies show that many children become malnourished during cancer treatment, and the issue continues to be a significant problem for childhood cancer survivors many years after treatment.
As a result, Dr Murphy has developed a tool to screen children with cancer for malnutrition and is working on introducing it in hospitals across the globe.
Dr Murphy will use data from the tool to see if the children’s nutritional issues vary from country to country.
Dr Alexia Murphy“We will also review data from children screened a decade ago to see if those who were malnourished during treatment have had adverse outcomes 10 years on,” she said.
“Ultimately, we hope this work will help us to provide a better prognosis for children with cancer.”
Dr Murphy is co-founder and co-chair of the world’s first International Paediatric Oncology Nutrition Group, which brings together more than 100 health professionals and researchers from 29 countries.
Dr Murphy will receive the World Cancer Research Fund International Academy Fellowship in the UK next month.
World Cancer Research Fund International Executive Director of Science and Public Affairs Kate Allen said they were pleased to offer Dr Murphy the fellowship.
“We’re committed to developing future leaders in nutritional epidemiology through our academy fellowships and Dr Murphy is an outstanding applicant who is doing vital work,” she said.
Related Articles

Should chatbot psychologists be part of the health system?

This year, an announcement that chatbot psychologists could become part of Australia's...

New $145m 'quiet hospital' opens in Vic

A new $145 million Northern Private Hospital has opened in Epping, Victoria, featuring the latest...

New guidelines for concussion and brain health released

The Australian Institute of Sport, in close collaboration with the Australian Physiotherapy...


  • All content Copyright © 2024 Westwick-Farrow Pty Ltd