Associate Professor Pamela Palasanthiran
MB BS (Uni Melb), Doctor of Medicine (MD,UNSW), FRACP, GradDip Child Development (Melb)
Professor Pamela Palasanthiran is a paediatric infectious diseases specialist and joint Head of Department, Department of Immunology and Infectious Diseases, Sydney Children's Hospital Network, Randwick (SCHN, R). She is a graduate of the University of Melbourne. She completed her training in paediatrics at both, the Royal Children's Hospital, Parkville and the then, Prince of Wales Children's Hospital, Randwick. She undertook specialist training in Infectious Diseases at Duke University Medical Centre, Durham, North Carolina (USA). She also completed aÌýDoctorate of Medicine (MD) at UNSW in the area of perinatal HIV. She took up the appointment of specialist consultant in paediatric communicable diseases at the (now called) Sydney Children's Hospital Network, Randwick and has been running the infectious diseases service there for nearly 3Ìý decades. She is the co-chair of the Infection Prevention and Control Committee and a member of the Antimicrobial Stewardship Programme, with an active interest in both these important hospital-wide field²õÌýof quality and safety in health care. Primarily a clinician, she is also actively engagedÌýin the education ofÌýbothÌýundergraduate and postgraduate medical students, other health professionals, guideline development and research in many areas of paediatric infectious diseases.Ìý
- Publications
- Media
- Grants
- Awards
- Research Activities
- Engagement
- Teaching and Supervision
Professor Palasanthiran has an interest in aÌýwide range of paediatric infectious disease²õÌýand publishes in these areas. Her primary research areas are in perinatal infections particularly congenital CMV, paediatric HIV, acute bacterial meningitis, influenza, paediatric tuberculosis and infection control. She supervises ILP students some of whom are involved in aspects of the research interests below.Ìý
Current research studies include:
1) Congenital CMV (cCMV): Epidemiology and clinical outcomes of congenital CMV in Australian children. This includes collaborative studies in cCMV including
- Australian cCMV Registry (neurodevelopmental outcomes: cCMV Registry (Australia and New Zealand)
- prospective national surveillance of congenital CMV via a surveillance reporting systemÌý(the APSU: the Australasian Paediatric Surveillance Unit)
- Optimising the detection of congenital CMV in children who fail the universal newborn hearing screen
- Describing the clinical outcomes of congenital CMV children to inform practice
- Factors influencing the severity ofÌýcongenital CMV
- Genomics (viral) of CMV in congenital CMV
2) Postnatal CMV
- Epidemiology
- Clinical characteristics and outcomes
- Short term morbidity
- Long term morbidity
- Breast milk and reduction strategies
- Screening
2) Paediatric HIV
- Follow up of infants at risk of mother to child transmission of HIV (MTCT) who are uninfected (HEUC): in progress
- Adolescent paediatric HIV: in progress
- APSU: surveillance of MTCT HIV: in progress
- Many aspects of guidelines in paediatrc HIV
3) Acute bacterial meningitis
- Evidence based guidelines in the acute bacterial management
- Longitudinal academic outcome in survivors of acute bacterial meningitis in childhood: ILP study, linkage study in progres
4) InfectionÌýPrevention and Control
- Quality studies on IPC signage
- De-isolation of MRSA patient²õÌý
- Personal Protection Equipment in Infection ControlÌý
5) Cryptococcal disease in paediatrics: epidemiology
6) Influenza vaccination: ongoing ILP and BMed Sc studies in qualitative assessments in uptake of the influenza vaccine in health care workers (perceptions and uptake)
7) Perinatal infections: Algorithms in the management of infections on pregnancy and the newborn; Guidelines -Ìýon going evidence-based medicine projects
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Congenital CMV community
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My Research Supervision
1) Adverse vaccine events in Australian children presenting to an adverse events clinicÌý
My Teaching
Undergraduate medical students programme²õÌý