We are an iconic provider of hospital-based healthcare, striving to deliver an exceptional standard of care
We comprise several hospitals, health centres, a nationally accredited education provider and a world-class research institute
We are a nationally accredited, hospital-based Registered Training Organisation - the only one of its kind in Queensland
We are part of a collaborative research institute with The University of Queensland and founding partner of the Translational Research Institute
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Every year in Australia almost 3,000 families experience the heartbreak of stillbirth or neonatal death. The death of a baby—either during pregnancy or soon after ...
Being a mother to six boys, with one of her children born prematurely at 29 weeks, prompted Noongar woman Valerie Ah Chee to become a midwife at the age of 45.
Proud Brisbane mum of six and Mater Researcher Valerie Ah Chee has embarked on a 20-hour long drive to Melbourne to cheer on her very own Brisbane Lions cub Callum Ah ...
Australian midwives and other maternity services clinicians will be trained in a nation-wide bereavement program.
The Stillbirth CRE has been given a huge funding boost to deliver culturally and linguistically appropriate programs on stillbirth prevention and care to First ...
Stillbirth affects more than 2,000 Australian families each year (six babies lost each day). Not every stillbirth is preventable, but many are.
Mater researcher and Director of the Stillbirth Centre for Research Excellence (CRE) Professor Vicki Flenady has been awarded $1.3 million through the Federal ...
Professor Vicki Flenady and her team at the Stillbirth Centre of Research Excellence (CRE) at Mater Research Institute – University of Queensland were awarded the UQ ...
A new mobile phone app being trialled at Mater Mothers’ Hospital Brisbane aims to reduce the rate of stillbirth in Australia by 30 per cent by focusing on a baby’s kicks.