Dr Elizabeth Palmer
UNIVERSITY OF NEW SOUTH WALES (2014-2019)
PhD conferred November 2019. Application of Massively Parallel Sequencing for the Diagnosis of Developmental and Epileptic Encephalopathies
USW nominee for CSL Florey Next Generation Award (2018); UNSW Medicine Award for Outstanding Contribution to Research by a Higher Degree Student (2018); Senior Presenter prize, UNSW Paediatric Research week (2018); School of Women and Children’s Health, UNSW Junior Conjoint Award (2018
UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD, EXETER COLLEGE, UK (1995-1999)
1ST BM PRE-CLINICAL MEDICINE.
BA HONS IN PSYCHOLOGY, PHILOSOPHY AND PHYSIOLOGY. CLASS 1.
Scholar of Exeter College, Fitzgerald Prize and Collection Prizes for academic achievements
MBBS ROYAL FREE AND UNIVERSITY COLLEGE MEDICAL SCHOOL, LONDON, UK (1999-2002)
Nominee for the Gold Medal, London Medical Schools.
Distinctions in Medicine, Surgery, Obstetrics and Gynaecology and Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics. Subject prizes for achievements in examinations and clinical placements. Boldero, Hart and Dawkins Prize in Paediatrics, Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health Student Prize Winner, 2nd Philip Seth Belasco and Douglas Cree Prize in Medicine, Horace Jules Prize in Public Health, Bernard Hart Prize in Psychiatry, John Murray Prize in Pharmacology, Joint 2nd Lydell and Leopold Hudson Prize in Surgery, Joint Hetley and Atchison Clinical Prize. Certificates of Merit (1st, 2nd and 3rd Clinical Years) for overall clinical performance
FELLOW OF THE ROYAL AUSTRALASIAN COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS (CLINICAL GENETICS)(2012)
High Distinction in Unit in Human Genetics (Macquarie University).
DIPLOMA IN TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE, LONDON SCHOOL OF HYGIENE ANDTROPICAL MEDICINE, ROYAL COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS, UK (2006).
The Duncan Prize for best student.
DIPLOMA FROM THE ROYAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND COLLEGE OF OBSTETRICIANS AND GYNAECOLOGISTS (2005).
Award for Outstanding Achievement, DRANZCOG oral examination.
MEMBERSHIP OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF PAEDIATRICS AND CHILD HEALTH, UK (2005)
ASSOCIATE FELLOW OF THE HIGHER EDUCATION ACADEMY, UK(2021)
Emma is a senior clinical lecturer and holds a research fellowship (Investigator Grant) from the NHMRC (National Health and Medical Research Council). Her work as a Clinical Geneticist, seeing families with rare genetic conditions at Sydney Children’s Hospital, informs her research, which aims to improve the patient journey for the 2 million Australians and 300 million people globally with a rare disease. highlights one of those projects with a NSW family.
There are over 7,000 individually rare diseases, most of which have an underlying genetic cause, and start in childhood. The recent Australian Government National Strategic Action Plan for Rare Disease highlighted shared challenges including lack of awareness of rare disease, the struggle for a timely and accurate diagnosis, limited care and support options, a lack of research and poor data collection and use. Rare diseases typically affect multiple organ systems and are challenging for health professionals to diagnose and manage independently due to their rarity and complexity, and lack of sufficient clinician education. Although each individual genetic condition is rare (defined as affecting less than 5 in 10,000 people) the collective impact on Australians health and wellbeing is substantial. Simply put rare diseases are the biggest killer of kids. In developed countries, such as Australia, >60% of childhood deaths are of children who have an underlying rare disease. A third of all children with a rare genetic condition die before reaching their fifth birthday.
Emma’s PhD research looked at how new genetic technologies (exome and whole genome sequencing) can revolutionise the diagnosis of a group of rare diseases, the developmental and epileptic encephalopathies, which are early-onset life-threatening epilepsies. She discovered 7 new genetic conditions, and her research improved the genetic diagnosis for kids at SCHN with this group of conditions from less than 5% to over 75%.
Since her PhD she has broadened her research to not only understand how to better diagnosis all rare genetic conditions, but also how to improve the whole journey for children with rare diseases and their parents, and revolutionise care to that which is equitable, evidence-based and accessible for all. She is a leader in clinical undiagnosed disease programs in NSW, nationally and internationally (GeneAdd, UDNAus- the Undiagnosed Disease Network Australia, and UDNI – the Undiagnosed Disease Network International). She recently led a national government funded program called RArEST (Rare Disease Education Support and Training) aiming to support clinicians across Australia better diagnose and support children and families with rare diseases and launched Australia's first National Recommendations for Rare Disease Health Care in federal parliament in Febriary 2024.. She also leads an inclusive research group GeneEQUAL which has taken an innovative approach to improving accessibility of genetic testing and care for people with intellectual disability, by co-designing accessible resources in partnership with people with intellectual disability. At Sydney Children’s Hospitals Network she has helped develop the program Gene2Care which aims to put every child with a rare disease in the best possible position for a rapid genetic diagnosis and access to best support and care. She also leads a hospital-based research program for rare neurogenetic conditions at SCHN called CoGENES and co-leads a national genetic epilepsy program called the DEER program (NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence).
She also is passionate about equitable global health care and is an advisor on a World Health Organization taskforce to strengthen health services internationally to provide rare disease care. She co-leads the Undiagnosed Disease Network International Diagnostic Working Group, which supports clinicians in developing countries to help their patients access genetic diagnosis and provides educational support to those clinicians. She has authored over 110 peer-reviewed medical publications, which have been cited over 2,900 times in the global medical literature.
- Publications
- Grants
- Awards
- Research Activities
- Engagement
- Teaching and Supervision
- Media
Current grants:
- 2024: MRFF funding: “NurtureNextGen: Co-design of a digital tool to support families of children with genetic neurodevelopmental conditions to receive balanced prognostic information” ($598,101) CI
- 2024: MRFF funding: “Integrated Genetic HealthCare- Improving Access to Quality Genetic Services for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Patients” ($1,9 million) CI
- 2023: Australian Government Rare and Complex Disease Telehealth Nurse Program ($2,48 million) Lead for trial site at Sydney Children’s Hospital Network.
- 2023: NSW Ministry of Health funding "Point of Care Easy Read Genetic Test Decision Aid Toolkit for People with Intellectual Disability" ($120,000) CIA
- 2023: MRFF funding “A national long-read genome sequencing project to improve rare disease diagnosis” ($2.9 million) CI
- 2022: NHMRC funding “GeneEQUAL: equitable and accessible genomic health care for people with intellectual disability” ($1.6 million) CIA
- 2021: NMHRC Investigator Grant “Gene2Care: a comprehensive program of research to revolutionize care for children with rare genetic conditions” ($390,444) CIA
- 2021: NHMRC Centre for Research Excellence for Developmental and Epileptic Encephalopathies ($2,5 million) CIC
- 2021: MRFF funding “High Throughput functional genomics assays for ion channelopathies”($2,8 million) CI
- 2021: MRFF funding “The Australian Undiagnosed Diseases Network (UDN-Aus): An internationally networked national approach for transforming diagnosis for individuals living with a rare disease” ($3 million) CI
- 2021: MRFF funding “The Australian Functional Genomics Network” ($6 million) CI
Recent grants:
- 2021: Department of Health Funding “RArEST” Rare disease Awareness, Education, Support and Training ($1.9 million) CIA
- 2020: Philanthropic Funding GeneCOMPASS: a Knowledge-to-Action program linking families and clinicians with world-class neurogenetic personalised medicine information($330,000) CIA
- 2020: Australian Epilepsy Research Fund Preparing Australia for Precision Medicine in the Developmental and Epileptic Encephalopathies($686,537) CIC
- 2017: SPHERE funding for CoGENES project Officer Improving Clinical Care and Support for Children with Severe Early-Onset Epilepsies and Their Families.($17,000). CIA
- 2016: NSW Office of Health and Medical Research Grant. Drug resistant childhood onset epilepsy with intellectual disability: leveraging genomic sequencing to identify novel genes and neurodevelopmental pathways and determine optimal diagnostic protocols: “Drug resistant childhood onset epilepsy with intellectual disability: leveraging genomic sequencing to identify novel genes and neurodevelopmental pathways and determine optimal diagnostic protocols” ($180,000). CIC
- 2016: NHMRC Postgraduate PhD Scholarship Grant Supervisors Edwin Kirk and Annie Bye. “Application of Next Generation Sequencing for the Diagnosis of Epileptic Encephalopathy – the science, the costings and the impact.” ($127,000) CIA
Recent awards include:
-
J.Moss Trophy for outstanding wokr in the field of intellectual disability (2023)
-
UNSW nominee for CSL Florey Next Generation Award (2018)
-
UNSW Medicine Award for Outstanding Contribution to Research by a Higher Degree Student (2018)
-
School of Women and Children’s Health, UNSW Junior Conjoint Award (2018)
-
Senior Presenter prize, UNSW Paediatric Research week (2008)
Emma leads the following collaborative research programs:
1. GeneEQUAL a co-design project to improve equity and accessibility of genomic testing and counselling to people with intellectual disabilities. Find out more at www.GeneEQUAL.com
2. , an innovative rare genetic disease program at SCHN, to ensure all families with genetic conditions have the option of participating in research and being linked to undiagnosed disease pathways and clinical trials.
3. an interdisciplinary research team improving diagnoses, support and treatments for children with rare genetic epilepsies and their families.
She is also a chief investigator on several national and international rare disease programs including the newly launched national undiagnosed disease program and the Diagnostic Working Group of the
She strives to ensure that the patient and family voice is always central to all her research.
Emma is a moderator for 8 genetic causes of ID/ASD on the Human Disease Gene and GenIDA Websites
(SCN2A, ZSWIM6, THOC2, ATN1, IQSEC2, PUM1, PCHDH19, KCNT2).
Emma is on the following patient advocacy/ rare disease scientific advisory boards:
- CureCLCN4
- SCN2A Australia
- Rare Voices Australia
- SATB2 Australia
COGENES puts the family first in all our research and we are informed by our consumer (family) reference group.
- We asked parents of children with genetic epilepsy about their information and support needs. this informed the co-design of two sets of resources:
- Information for families on
- Finding a Way: a set of positive psychology resources
- and our current pilot of an information service GeneCOMPASS
- We run Genetic Epilepsy Family Days to keep families up to date with the latest research and clinical findings
- We participate in other family days, for example for Genetic Epilepsy Team Australia and SCN2A, CureCLCN4 and Kleefstra syndrome groups
- We have also recorded a range of podcasts and other media: for example
- Emma talks about Genetic Epilepsy testing: : ;
My Research Supervision
2024: 1 PhD Student. 2 Masters students UNSW. 2 Honours students UNSW
Looking to recruit 1 PhD student with a full scholarship in place for research related to psychosocial support for siblings of children with severe epilepsies.
My Teaching
Lecturer for UNSW Medicine (Phase 1 and Phase 3); University of Sydney Masters of Genomic Medicine; RACP Fellowship for Clinical Genetics; University of Sydney Masters of Genetic Counselling. Lead Convenor UNSW Short Course Genomics for the Practicing Clinician