Consultant physician General Medicine & Infectious Diseases, Alfred Health, past MRFF TRIP Fellow, Monash University
Dr Michelle Ananda-Rajah MBBS (HONS), FRACP, PhD is an infectious diseases and general physician at Alfred Health with an interest in artificial intelligence and health services research. Michelle has led the largest body of work on applied AI for the diagnosis, management and prevention of invasive fungal infections in haematology patients. She is the founder of FungalAi (https://www.fungalai.com), a multimodal application combining text and image processing, that aims to make surveillance of fungal infections feasible for a range of quality improvement and research activities in hospitals. She is a member of the data monitoring and safety committee of the Australasian Myeloma Research Consortium, the peak body responsible for clinical trials in myeloma in 2019. Her peer review responsibilities include appointment to JAMA Network Open as a paid statistical and methods reviewer. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Michelle co-founded Healthcare Workers Australia (https://healthcareworkersaustralia.com), a grassroots advocacy movement dedicated to improving the occupational safety of healthcare workers. She has published on work, health and safety issues for health care workers, made numerous media appearances including an appearance on QandA (ABC) in Feb 2021, 4Corners (May 2021) and written for The Australian newspaper.
Jun 17, 2021 04:12 am UTC| Health
Almost a year ago, in July 2020, our calls for the government to urgently upgrade the guidelines to protect health workers from airborne SARS-CoV-2 fell on deaf ears. The existing guidelines said health providers...
Johannesburg in a time of darkness: Ivan Vladislavić’s new memoir reminds us of the city’s fragility
Labour can afford to be far more ambitious with its economic policies – voters are on board
Sudan: civil war stretches into a second year with no end in sight