Histology
Tuesday, 14 October 2008 11:00 - 12:30, Carillon Room
| Chair | Alison Boyd |
Using in Situ Hybridisation to Detect Latent EBV
Georgia is a Medical Scientist in Anatomical Pathology at St Vincent's Hospital, Melbourne. She has a major in molecular biology as well as post graduate qualifications in genetic counselling. After graduating she commenced working in research that looked at sub typing tumours morphologically, immuno-histochemically as well as genetically. This was the beginning of a journey that would lead her to Anatomical Pathology. With her keen interest in both histology and genetics she is always eager to trial new techniques. |
Practising Medicine in Developing Countries
Dr Jacqueline Boyd completed her medical degree at the Adelaide University in 2005. Throughout her undergraduate study she travelled and worked in rural Australia., Indigenous communities and overseas in India and Papua New Guinea. Following her internship at the Royal Adelaide Hospital, she lived and worked for a year in Kompiam, a remote town in the highlands of Papua New Guinea. She is now working on her Masters of Public Health and Tropical Medicine. |
Implementation of Multi-Slice CT Technology in a Forensic Mortuary
Sarsha is employed as a Forensic Technical Officer at the Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine, and am currently enrolled in a PhD program whereby my doctoral research project title is ‘The post-mortem CT assessment of age-related changes to the cervical spine’. Her research interests are in the areas of forensic anthropology, radiology, and mortuary science. |