BIOMARKERS FOR EARLY SEPSIS DETECTION
With
Dr Gabrielle Briggs
Postdoctoral Researcher and Lab Manager,
School of Medicine and Public Health
The University of Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia
RESEARCHER PROFILE
Filmed in Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia | October 2025
Dr Gabrielle Briggs is a biomedical scientist dedicated to finding smarter, faster ways to diagnose and treat life threatening complications in critically ill patients. Dr Briggs established a research laboratory embedded within the John Hunter Hospital – one of the busiest major trauma centres in NSW. Dr Briggs works alongside surgeons, intensivists, and pathologists to turn complex clinical problems into practical research solutions. Her work spans two major programs: developing a rapid diagnostic test to detect bacterial infections in blood before sepsis takes hold, and exploring mitochondrial transplantation as a novel therapy to rescue injured tissues after trauma and ischaemia.
Dr Briggs has a strong focus on innovation and translation, building close partnerships between the university and the health service to accelerate the movement of new technologies into clinical practice. Gabrielle played a key role in founding the Hunter Medical Research Institute’s Injury and Trauma Research Program and currently serves as its Deputy Director. Gabrielle is also an enthusiastic educator, teaching the next generation of clinicians in the University of Newcastle’s Joint Medical Program.
Source: Supplied
You Might also like
-
Discovery of RANK Ligand’s role in bone metabolism and the immune system to treat osteoporosis
Emeritus Professor Jack Martin’s research began a discovery cascade that led to the identification of a new protein and the development of a novel and effective drug therapy that is now used worldwide to treat osteoporosis, cancer and other diseases.
-
Understanding the experience of pain for novel brain-based treatments
Associate Professor Tasha Stanton leads the Persistent Pain Research Group at SAHMRI. She is also co-Director of IIMPACT in Health at the University of South Australia, Adelaide. She is a clinical pain neuroscientist, with original training as a physiotherapist, and her research focusses on pain – why do we have it and why doesn’t it go away?
-
Anaemia guidelines updated after 50 years
Professor Sant-Rayn Pasricha is the Acting Deputy Director at the Walter Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research in Melbourne, Australia. He is also a clinical haematologist at the Royal Melbourne Hospital and the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre. From a young age, Prof Pasricha dreamed of becoming a doctor and found joy in learning about the human body and how to care for patients. After completing medical school, he developed a passion for working in low and middle-income countries, which led him to spend time working in East Timor, India, and Central Australia with First Nations communities.