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Bold vision to transform the health and wellbeing of children in Australia

03 March 2025

Originally shared on mcri.edu.au

Two of the largest studies of their kind in Australia have a bold vision to come together to transform the health and wellbeing of children now and for future generations.

GenV, tracking the health of almost 125,000 Victorians (49,311 children and 74,409 parents/guardians), and ORIGINS, following 10,000 children and their families in WA, will pool their resources to create Generation Australia.

By unlocking the full potential of both studies, Generation Australia presents a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to map and make a long-lasting difference to the health of all Australians from birth to old age. The national platform will help provide answers to complex physical and mental health issues such as asthma, food allergies, obesity and anxiety.

Generation Australia is spearheaded by Murdoch Children’s Research Institute (MCRI) in Melbourne and The Kids Research Institute Australia (The Kids) in Perth, Australia’s two largest child health research institutes.

GenV Director and MCRI Professor Melissa Wake said the groundbreaking project would help researchers to test and fast-track solutions at scale and save taxpayer dollars and reduce healthcare costs.

“Being the two longitudinal child and family cohort studies with the most comprehensive depth and scale in Australia, they have the unique capability of testing interventions at scale,” she said. Importantly, with the results representing our whole population, the findings can be tailored to everyone.”

Being the two longitudinal child and family cohort studies with the most comprehensive depth and scale in Australia, they have the unique capability of testing interventions at scale,” she said. Importantly, with the results representing our whole population, the findings can be tailored to everyone.
Melissa Wake
MCRI Professor Melissa Wake
GenV Director

“This will accelerate more efficient research of global importance to discover new treatments, reduce service delivery costs, and tailor rapid care for children and adults to create better and more equitable health, development and wellbeing outcomes.

“The project will also save costs to families, especially those with a sick child, by halting or preventing disease and addressing long wait lists for early childhood services.”

Some of the child health issues Generation Australia will tackle include:

  • Hearing loss: Making congenital cytomegalovirus (cCMV) screening routine to detect and treat the most common infectious cause of newborn disability
  • Heart health: Creating an Australian-first comprehensive suite of interventions to halt the rise in heart disease and obesity
  • Impact of droughts, floods and heatwaves: Modifying environments, homes and schools to keep children learning and families thriving through challenging climate events
  • Mental health: Testing a low-cost digital counselling solution to help treat the one in five parents with anxiety or depression, at any time and place.
  • Congenital hip dysplasia: Creating a registry that could avert the need for hip replacements in young adults
  • ADHD, autism spectrum disorder and cerebral palsy: Using a parent-captured video app and AI for earlier diagnosis and to test new treatments
  • Delivering personalised treatments resulting in fewer emergency department visits

Professor Wake said, for the first time in generations, today’s children may have poorer health outcomes than their parents, unless something changed.

“Generation Australia is designed not just to watch but to fix,” she said. We will discover new strategies to help all children and adults to thrive, prevent illness, and manage today’s complex, interconnected and emerging challenges.”

GenV Deputy Scientific Director and MCRI Professor Sharon Goldfeld said Generation Australia was needed as the current pace of research was too slow to keep up with the modern health and social challenges for Australia’s children and their families.

“The current policy environment offers real opportunities for benefit, but we need to know what works for which families and under what circumstances, or we just risk increasing inequality,” she said.

The current policy environment offers real opportunities for benefit, but we need to know what works for which families and under what circumstances, or we just risk increasing inequality.
MCRI Professor Sharon Goldfeld
GenV Deputy Scientific Director

ORIGINS Co-Director Professor Desiree Silva said interventional longitudinal studies presented a unique opportunity to provide real time feedback, ensuring participating families were referred to appropriate care and support.

“Without early intervention, children may spend years living under umbrella terms like difficult sleepers, fussy eaters, hyperactive and having poor emotional control, when in reality these often represent diagnosable and treatable issues that could greatly improve a child’s likelihood of flourishing throughout their life,” she said.

Professor Silva said Generation Australia also provided an opportunity for researchers to leverage both studies’ existing data, creating nested sub-projects that participants could also engage in.

“ORIGINS has over 50 current and completed sub-projects, ranging from research into the roots of asthma to perinatal mental health, which our 10,000 families have embraced being a part of.”

Children born between October 4, 2021 to October 3, 2023, who live in Victoria, can join GenV at any time, along with their parents. Eligibility also includes families who have moved to Victoria.

Find out more about GenV and ORIGINS.

Available for interview

Professor Melissa Wake, GenV Director

Professor Desiree Silva, ORIGINS Co-Director

Media Contact

Murdoch Children’s Research Institute
Phone: +61 457 365 848
Email: 

Jessica Powell
The Kids Communications Specialist
Ph: +61 421 785 905
E: jess.powell@thekids.org.au

About Murdoch Children’s Research Institute

Murdoch Children’s Research Institute is the largest child health research institute in Australia committed to making discoveries and developing treatments to improve child and adolescent health in Australia and around the world. They are pioneering new treatments, trialling better vaccines and improving ways of diagnosing and helping sick babies, children and adolescents. It is one of the only research institutes in Australia to offer genetic testing to find answers for families of children with previously undiagnosed conditions.

About GenV

Generation Victoria (GenV) tracks the health and wellbeing of almost 125,000 consented participants (~50,000 children most born October 2021-October 2023, 75,000 parents), which will grow over time. GenV is the largest and most inclusive cohort of its kind ever in Australia and one of the few of this size in the world. GenV’s observation and testing capability will help researchers, policymakers and service providers solve the connected 21st-century challenges (like mental health, chronic illness, infection, climate) leading to better prediction, prevention, early intervention, treatment and equity for Australia’s children and their parents.

About ORIGINS and The Kids Research Institute Australia

ORIGINS, a collaboration between The Kids Research Institute Australia and Joondalup Health Campus, is the largest longitudinal study of its kind in Australia. Following 10,000 Western Australian children from their time in the womb into early childhood, ORIGINS researchers are working to better understand the developmental origins, and reduce the rising epidemic of, non-communicable diseases. The Kids Research Institute Australia is one of the largest and most successful medical research institutes in Australia. The Kids’ vision is simple – happy health kids. The institute brings together community, researchers, practitioners, policy makes and funders, who share their mission to improve the health, development and live of children and young people through excellence in research.

Funding

GenV is funded and led by Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, supported by The Royal Children’s Hospital and the University of Melbourne, with additional funding from the Paul Ramsay Foundation, the Victorian Government and The Royal Children’s Hospital Foundation, with research infrastructure funding from the Federal Government via the Medical Research Future Fund and the National Health and Medical Research Council. ORIGINS is funded by Telethon, the Paul Ramsay Foundation, the Stan Peron Charitable Foundation, and the Western Australia’s Future Health Research & Innovation Fund.

Saujanya Gumidyala
Article by Saujanya Gumidyala