![]() She couldn't work for 10 weeks the facial reconstructive surgery she'd undergone required wiring her jaws shut. Coming to her rescue, Smith piloted a stolen plane from Burbank, California, and rushed her to surgeons at a UCLA medical center. A year later, while performing in Lake Tahoe, Nevada, she fell from an elevated platform on stage and broke her left arm, cheekbone, and jawbone. (They have no children together.)Īround the time Ann-Margret was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role in 1971's Carnal Knowledge, she was dependent on pills and alcohol, unable to distinguish fantasy from reality, she told the New York Times. Over their decades together, the business and marital partners have leaned on each other during trying times marked by substance abuse, life-altering injury, and chronic illness. More details: See Laureate Professor Roger Smith's University of Newcastle researcher profile.Smith signs Ann-Margret\’s cast, 1972. Laureate Professor Smith is also the Director of the Department of Endocrinology at the John Hunter Hospital and is a Life Member of the Endocrine Society of Australia. He has presented at over 100 scientific conferences and received over $20 million in project funding. Laureate Professor Smith is an internationally-recognised researcher with over 250 research papers published in journals including Nature, Nature Medicine and the New England Journal of Medicine. Laureate Professor Smith has been integral in establishing the successful Gomeroi Gaanyggal project operating in Tamworth, Newcastle and Walgett, NSW which aims to use art as a medium for increasing Indigenous women’s access to healthcare during pregnancy. Studies looking at the health of pregnant women and their babies are also being conducted in Nepal and in Indigenous Australians to determine if the birth weight of babies can predict their behavioural development later in life. Laureate Professor Smith is also involved in research into other aspects of pregnancy including genetic factors and changes in other hormones and their receptors including progesterone, which is another critical factor in the initiation of labour in humans. The role of CRH has also been studied in pregnancies that deliver preterm (less than 37 weeks gestation) by Professor Smith and his group who are working to characterise CRH levels in the mother as a potential biomarker for preterm delivery. He has been central in investigating the role of the hormone CRH (corticotrophin releasing hormone) and how it contributes to the maintenance of pregnancy and the induction of labour, a finding that has been a major step in understanding the mechanisms of human pregnancy in recent times. In 2013, Laureate Professor Smith was awarded a Member of the Order of Australia for his outstanding contribution to the field of human pregnancy physiology, highlighting his respected position within the community.įor over 30 years, Laureate Professor Smith has researched the biology behind human pregnancy and the hormones that regulate it. Laureate Professor Roger Smith AM is the Director of the HMRI Mothers and Babies Research Program and Director of the Mothers and Babies Research Centre. So that's why I'm working to improve the birth weights and health of all babies on the planet. This is closely linked to your intellectual and physical abilities which determine your ability to participate in education and significantly contribute to your freedom on the planet. A major determinant of whether you are healthy or not is whether you are born at the right weight and at the right time. My research is directed at improving the welfare and the wellbeing of everybody on the planet. What would be the ultimate goal for your research? The most complex and interesting part about the world around me are the people in it, and that's why I do what I do. I got into research in order to understand the world around me which continues to fascinate me everyday. ![]() I ultimately aim to improve the health and wellbeing of all babies across the world so that everyone is given the best possible start to life. My work into Indigenous health aims to bridge the gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous health outcomes beginning right at the beginning of someone's lifespan. The time at which a baby is born and also the weight at which a baby is born are both major determinants for their lifelong health. For years I have researched the mechanisms behind preterm birth and what causes a woman to go into labour early. I research the health and wellbeing of babies and their mothers.
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