Gastroenterologist and cancer scientist, South Australian Health & Medical Research Institute
Dan Worthley, M.B.,B.S.(Hons), MPH, PhD, FRACP, AGAF. I am a gastroenterologist and cancer researcher. I started my career as a medical student and gastroenterology trainee in Adelaide. I moved to Brisbane to complete my PhD and MPH at the University of Queensland, then to Columbia University in New York for a 4 year post-doctoral fellowship in stem and cancer cell biology. When I returned to Australia I established a research program in synthetic biology and a clinical practice that would, together, reduce bowel cancer death in our community. We are dedicated to detecting, preventing and treating bowel polyps and cancer. I work at Colonoscopy Clinic (Queensland). There is a future where no Australian will die of bowel cancer.
Johannesburg in a time of darkness: Ivan Vladislavić’s new memoir reminds us of the city’s fragility
Economist Chris Richardson on an ‘ugly’ inflation result and the coming budget
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