OCHRe News

16 August 2025

Dear OCHRe Members and Friends

We wish you a safe and happy weekend. If you have news you would like to share, please send it through to the team at ochre@uq.edu.au by Wednesday 2pm AEST.

OCHRe Central Hub www.ochrenetwork.org


News:

National Health and Medical Research Council

NHMRC Public Call for Submissions: Research Priority Areas in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health

The National Health Medical and Research Council (NHMRC) is seeking community input into research priorities in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health, which may form the basis of a Targeted Call for Research (TCR). Submissions should address a significant research knowledge gap or unmet need for which there is the potential to greatly advance our understanding of the issue.

Submissions open 21 July 2025 and close 15 September 2025.
Further details and submissions can be made on
NHMRC’s Consultation hub.

National Statement of Ethical Conduct in Human Research 2025

The National Statement on Ethical Conduct in Human Research 2025 was issued on 6 March 2025. The 2025 National Statement will take effect, and replace the 2023 National Statement, from 1 October 2025.

Co-authored by NHMRC, the Australian Research Council (ARC) and Universities Australia (UA), the National Statement is Australia’s principal human research guideline setting out the requirements for the ethical design, review and conduct of human research in Australia.

The 2025 National Statement and a summary of amendments can be found here. The major changes in this update are to Section 4. The National Statement was developed by NHMRC’s Australian Health Ethics Committee and was informed by public consultation

in accordance with the requirements of the National Health and Medical Research Council Act 1992.

Indigenous Futures Conference | 4 – 7 November 2025
Kabi Kabi Country

Indigenous futures unbound: Reimagining Indigenous futures through knowledge and praxis

Novotel Sunshine Coast Region

This conference is a call-to-action.

We ask:

  • How can we protect the earth, our human kin, and our non-human relatives for the future?

  • What can our Indigenous futures look like?

  • How can we future proof our nations? and

  • What will being Indigenous mean in the future?

Keynote speaker | Professor Audra Simpson is a Kahnawà:ke Mohawk scholar

Professor Audra Simpson is a Kahnawà:ke Mohawk scholar and researches and writes about Indigenous and settler society, politics and history at Columbia University.

Her book, Mohawk Interruptus: Political Life Across the Borders of Settler States (2014, DUP) won the Sharon Stephens Prize (AES), the “Best first Book Award” (NAISA) as well as the Lora Romero Award (ASA) in addition to honorable mentions.

For further information, click here

Walkern Katatdjin Roadmap Report

Working together to support Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander LGBTQIA+ young people to thrive.

The Walkern Katatdjin Roadmap report sets out a plan to work together to empower individuals, families, communities, and services to ensure that all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander LGBTQIA+ young people (14-25 years) are safe, healthy, and thriving.

This Roadmap was co-designed with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander LGBTQIA+ young people, families, community, Elders, and services.

It is intended to be used by: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander LGBTQIA+ young people’s family and community; health and wellbeing services and other services and systems; local, state and federal government; the wider community; and researchers.

The Roadmap webpage features resources including a Roadmap snapshot, targeted chapters, a video discussion between community members and services representatives, and links to further information and supports. 

You can request a hard copy of the Roadmap Report here.

For further information, contact Rainbow.Knowledge@thekids.org.au
or (08) 6319 1062.

OCHRe Scholarships:

Maali Hub | Current Offers

Indigenous Early / Mid Career Researchers | Health Research Related Support Fund Item

The Maali Hub Indigenous EMCR Health Research Related Support Fund is available to support Early to Mid-Career Researchers with project costs, health research related training, international and national conferences.

This is a continuous Open Round which opened on 1 March 2025 and closes on 30 November 2025.

Research support funding offered includes:

·       $10,000 Research support costs
·       $5,000 Training
·       $5,000 International conference attendance
·       $2,500 National conference attendance 

Please submit your application to maalihub@ecu.edu.au.

NEXGEN Hub | Current Offers

Health Research Experience Scholarships Program 2025
Round 2 Applications opened on 9 March 2025

NEXGEN are pleased to announce the launch of Health Research Experience Scholarships Program (Round 2) 2025 as part of our OCHRe NEXGEN Hub.

For this round, NEXGEN Hub will offer 12 Health Research Experience Scholarships Program (Scholarships) valued at $10,000 each. These Scholarships will provide opportunities for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders enrolled in an undergraduate degree (including Honours) or a postgraduate coursework program, to gain or enhance their research experience and skills.

The offer will be offered exclusively to Investigators (CIs and AIs) named on the NHMRC Targeted Call for Research application (APP 2005944: OCHRe).

This is a continuous Open Round.

Opened  | 9 March 2025
Closes  | 30 September 2025 or when all Scholarships have been awarded, whichever is the sooner.
Contact | nexgen@sph.uq.edu.au

For further information and application forms for both offers, see OCHRe Website - https://www.ochrenetwork.org/scholarships

Scholarships & Bursaries:

www.ochrenetwork.org/opportunities

Smoking and Vaping Cessation Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People

UoN PhD Scholarship Opportunity for an Indigenous Candidate

This Indigenous-led national research project evaluates a mailed-out smoking and vaping cessation intervention for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adolescents and adults.

Exciting PhD Opportunities for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Students.

Are you an Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander student passionate about health equity, tobacco control, and making a real-world impact in your community?

Join Professor Michelle Kennedy and her research team at the University of Newcastle to undertake a fully funded PhD as part of the Which Way? Quit Pack project, the largest national smoking and vaping cessation trial ever conducted with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

Please send the email expressing interest to Emily.Princehorn@newcastle.edu.au by 5pm on 31 August 2025.

For more information click here

Indigenous Health Equity Unit, Onemda – In Partnership with Nairm Marr Djambana

PhD Scholarship Opportunity for an Indigenous Candidate

The Indigenous Health Equity Unit in partnership with Nairm Marr Djambana, is offering a fully funded PhD scholarship for an Indigenous student to undertake a community-led research project that supports the development and implementation of an evaluation framework for Aboriginal community programs. This research project will co-develop an evidence-informed evaluation framework for Nairm Marr Djambana, a gathering place for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in Frankston, Victoria, focussing on cultural identity, social and emotional wellbeing, and community self-determination.

  • Base Stipend: $52,300 per annum (2025 rate and tax-free if full time study)

  • Project Top-Up: $20,000 per annum

  • Relocation allowance: $2,000 for students moving from States or Territories other than Victoria.

For more information, contact Professor Cath Chamberlain on cacham@unimelb.edu.au or Warwick Padgham on padghamw@unimelb.edu.au

Melbourne School of Population and Global Health - Centres and Institutes, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences

UoM PhD Scholarship Opportunity

Fostering a healthy start to life for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander families. Relighting the Firesticks is a community-based participatory research project. This research is based on our learnings and evidence from the pilot project, Healing the Past by Nurturing the Future (HPNF), and the scale up, Replanting the Birthing Tree (RBT) project.

For more information click here OR contact Professor Cath Chamberlain on cacham@unimelb.edu.au

Auora Education Foundation
First Nations Cancer Scholarship

A new generation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander leaders in cancer.

Valued at $120,000 a year, these will support Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander graduate students, health professionals, and early-career researchers (ECRs) to undertake full-time postgraduate study (graduate certificate, master’s or PhD) or research in a cancer-related field. It's funded by the Australian Government through Cancer Australia and established by the Aurora Education Foundation and Cancer Australia.

Closes: 12th Sept 2025

For further information click here: https://aurorafoundation.com.au/our-work/indigenous-pathways-portal/scholarships/first-nations-cancer-scholarship/

Auora Internship Program | Paid internships that build your career and your impact

Are you a First Nations university student or graduate looking to take the next step in your career?

The Aurora Internship Program offers paid placements with purpose – giving you the chance to gain experience, grow your confidence, and contribute to work that matters.

Interns are placed in organisations working to improve outcomes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. From grassroots nonprofits to research institutes, government, and the private sector. You don’t need to have it all figured out, just bring your curiosity, commitment, and lived experience.

APPLY NOW OR LEARN MORE AT: aurorafoundation.com.au
Scan the QR code for full program details and how to apply.

(And if you’re unsure or have questions, the Aurora team is here to help.)

Webinars, Workshops and
Professional Development

Lowitja Institute
Online Courses

These online courses were developed to support Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander researchers. They’re also highly valuable for non-Indigenous people working in the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and research sectors.

 The following online courses are available:

  • Indigenous Data Sovereignty

  • Introduction to Ethics in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Research

  • Community data literacy: Foundations

  • Introduction to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Research

  • Introduction to Indigenous Knowledge Translation

  • Introduction to Evaluation in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Contexts

For more information and to apply click here.

University of Sydney | Central Sydney (Patyegarang) Precinct
Graduate Diploma in Indigenous Health Promotion

Designed for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health workers, our Graduate Diploma in Indigenous Health Promotion aims to improve Indigenous health at a community level. This program will give you the knowledge and skills to identify community needs, develop a plan of action and execute it. 

Our program is for Indigenous health practitioners who already have a role in promoting the health of their communities or hold equivalent qualifications. It is designed to give practitioners skills they need to help prevent illness and reduce the harms in the community.

For more information and to apply click here.

Health Translation Queensland
Online workshops supporting research
with First Nations Peoples

Join our popular and free workshops supporting research with First Nations Peoples.
The workshops will be delivered by Shevaun Wright, Solicitor, Terri Janke and Company.

Workshop 1: Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property

This session will explore the legal dimensions of Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property (ICIP) which, together with cultural sensitivity and respect, provide the cornerstones of research with and for First Nations communities.

Developed by Terri Janke and Company, this workshop is anchored in the unique 'Ten True Tracks® Principles'®, a best practice framework for ethical Indigenous engagement.

Date: 7 October 2025
Time: 11am - 12pm (AEST-QLD)
Register Here

Workshop 2: Indigenous Data Sovereignty 

Explore the concept of Indigenous Data Sovereignty in health research and learn how to apply it through Indigenous Data Governance. This session will explore how these principles can be embedded through culturally responsive approaches and ethically grounded research practices.

Date: 14 October 2025
Time: 11am - 12pm (AEST-QLD)
Register Here

ALIGN (Australian Alliance for Indigenous Genomics)
Launched ALIGN’s Online Course - Genomics Our Way | An Introduction to Genomics Research with Indigenous Australians

ALIGN were able to develop and deliver this first-of-its-kind course through the ALIGN network, the OCHRE network, with financial support from the Australian Academy of Science–Theo Murphy Initiative (AAS-TMI).

What’s next?

‘Genomics Our Way’ is more than a course—it’s a statement about how genomics research with Indigenous Australians should be done.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander – Ways of Knowing, Being and Doing:

Indigenous Datathon: Applying Indigenous Data Governance to Healthcare

Expressions of interest are now open to attend the Indigenous Datathon 2025
Location: Brisbane | Dates: October 11 and 12, 2025

Co-located with International Data Week 2025, the event will see participants explore real-world questions using data science, guided by the CARE Principles (Collective Benefit, Authority to Control, Responsibility, Ethics) of Indigenous data governance.

The event is being run by the Indigenous Data Network  (University of Melbourne), the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society  (ANZICS), the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW),  QUT Centre for Data Science  (QUT CDS) and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Community Health Service Brisbane  (ATSICHS-Brisbane).
The event is designed for post-graduate students, clinicians, researchers, or emerging data scientists. Participants will work in teams to analyse healthcare datasets while learning how to apply ethical, culturally responsive data practices.
It is an opportunity for participants to sharpen their skills, connect with others, and contribute to meaningful, values-driven solutions. We welcome participants with a wide range of backgrounds and skills who are interested in engaging with health data, but we strongly encourage Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples to apply. 
Numbers are limited to ensure each participant is well supported by mentors, subject domain experts and datathon volunteers.

Please submit your expression of interest by June 29, 2025 here: https://mspgh.unimelb.edu.au/centres-institutes/onemda/research-group/indigenous-data-network/indigenous-datathon-2025

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CONFERENCES

10th Rural and Remote Health Scientific Symposium
8 – 9 October | Mparntwe (Alice Springs)

Research from the heart – shaping rural & remote health futures’

If you have research findings to share, this is your opportunity to contribute to a movement dedicated to improving rural and remote health in Australia.

Presentation Opportunities: Find the Right Format for You

Indigenous Wellbeing Conference 2025
20 – 21 October | Meanjin (Brisbane)
Walking Together, Flourishing Together: Pathways to Indigenous Wellbeing

Join us in Meanjin (Brisbane) as we share solutions to the most important wellbeing needs of all First Nations Australian, Māori and Pasifika people.

OCHRe Convocation

29 – 30 October  |  (Meanjin) Brisbane
Voices of Country: Research, Resilience and Renewal 
REGISTRATIONS NOW OPEN 

Indigenous Allied Health Australia
24 – 26 November | Sunshine Coast

Tradition to Transformation: Leading in Allied Health
For more information and to register, click
here. 

Australian Indigenous Doctors Association
27 – 29 November

For more information, click AIDA 2025 Conference

November 18th World Congress on Public Health

6-9 September 2026 | South Africa

Health Without Borders: Equity, Inclusion, and Sustainability
For more information,
click here

GRANT CONNECT

All Australian Government grant opportunities are advertised on Grant Connect including NHMRC, MRFF, ARC and many other grants. Below are some current opportunities.

For current list of all grants on Grant Connect click here.

DAACM – 2025 Dementia, Ageing and Aged Care Grant Opportunity

The objectives and outcomes of this grant opportunity align with the Roadmap and Implementation Plan for the Dementia, Ageing and Aged Care Mission.

Application closes | 5:00 pm (ACT Local Time) 20 August 2025
For further information, click here.

MRFF 2022 Frontier Health and Medical Research Grant Opportunity

This grant opportunity offers funding to support medical research and medical innovation programs of research that deliver a ‘moonshot’ by creating a treatment for a currently serious and incurable health condition, through a series of linked projects. The program of research can propose to develop novel health technologies and/or re-purpose existing health technologies in a novel way.

We expect that expressions of interest will close on 31 March 2026, with the last grants awarded by 30 June 2027.

Total Amount Available (AUD): $400,000,000
Estimated Grant Value (AUD):     $25,000,000
For further information, click here.

National Health and Medical Research Council

Partnership Projects – 2025

 Partnership Projects will support collaborations, within the Australian context, that translate research evidence into health policy and health practice, to improve health services and processes

 Minimum data closes at 17:00 ACT local time on the following dates:

  • PRC1 – 19 March 2025

  • PRC2 – 23 July 2025

  • PRC3 – 12 November 2025

 For further information, click here.

2025 NHMRC-Global Alliance Chronic Diseases: Strengthening Health Systems

Total Grant Pool (AUD) | $5,000,000
Application closes | 5:00 pm (ACT Local Time) on 28 October 2025
For further information, click here.

ALIGN (Australian Alliance for Indigenous Genomics) & The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research (WEHI)

Indigenous Visiting Research Fellowship

 The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research (WEHI) and The Australian Alliance for Indigenous Genomics (ALIGN) have collaborated to offer an excellent opportunity for an Indigenous Visiting Research Fellow. This opportunity will support an Indigenous researcher using advanced genomics to improve diagnostic outcomes for people with suspected genetic immune disease. Flexible funding of up to $300,000 over two years is available.

Fellows can range from PhD students who have completed their confirmation of candidature, through to post-graduate, mid-career researchers. Clinicians with an interest in research are also welcome to apply.

Applications for this program opened May 2025 and are reviewed on a rolling basis, so you may apply at any time.

Applications close: October 2025
For further information,
view the website here OR scan the QR code

Employment   

The University of Queensland –
UQ Poche Centre for Indigenous Health

Research Project Officer – Indigenous Health (Identified s25)

The UQ Poche Centre for Indigenous Health is seeking two full-time (or negotiable part-time) team members to join us through to June 2027, based in our Toowong office.
These positions are open to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander candidates and will work across either the Young, Deadly, Free project or the GLOWS project. Both roles focus on engaging with communities, collecting data, and supporting sexual health and wellbeing initiatives in partnership with Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisations.

Closing Date: 9 September 2025 at 11:00pm AEST

The Kids Research Institute Australia

Project Manager, Precision Medicine

The Kids Research Institute Australia are recruiting a project manager (based in NSW) for the Aboriginal Precision Medicine project.
The project manager will with the team to co-design and implement an Aboriginal-led precision medicine program across the state. The role requires working closely with the Australian Alliance for Indigenous Genomics (ALIGN) team and a wide range of stakeholders, to coordinate and manage the project with a specific focus on facilitating research priorities, health service implementation, and capacity building initiatives.

For more information about the role please contact: Johanna Barclay, General Manager, Australian Alliance for Indigenous Genomics

Contact Email: Johanna.barclay@thekids.org.au

Closing Date: 3 September 2025 - The Kids Research Institute reserve the right to hire prior to the closing date.

For full position description, click here

University of Notre Dame Broome Campus

Positions available in Healthcare Education

Program Co-ordinator (Nursing)
Trainer and Assessor (Nursing)
Student Support Officer

For further information, click here


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