Researchers within the Laboratory of Ageing and Pharmacology are working to ensure older people receive the best possible health care and treatment advice. Our focus is on prevention and better management of common challenges like frailty, falls and confusion.
Our team is working to improve the safety and effectiveness of medicines for older adults. We use laboratory, clinical and population based studies to understand the risks and benefits of medicines in older people, particularly those with multiple chronic medical conditions. These findings help older people benefit from medicines and minimise adverse effects.
We have developed a pharmacological risk assessment tool, the Drug Burden Index, to assess the impact of an older person’s medicines on their physical function. We have demonstrated that a higher Drug Burden Index is linked to loss of independence, more falls, frailty, longer stays in hospital and a greater mortality.
We are now developing software, the Drug Burden Index Calculator©, which we are using to trial the Drug Burden Index in clinical practice. It is clinical tool to help stop medicines that are likely to cause more harm than benefit. We have taken a new approach to better understand how multiple medicines impair physical and cognitive function in old age, and that approach is now being incorporated into practice in hospitals, community and residential aged care settings in Australia and internationally.
A major theme of our research is investigating the effects of medicines when taken by frail, older people and those with dementia. We have developed tools to measure frailty in hospital patients and we have shown that frailty affects how medicines work and their overall effectiveness and safety.
We found that the use of multiple medicines at the same time and some particular types of medicines increase the risks of becoming frail and confused. We have developed tools to help doctors, nurses and pharmacists align medicines use with goals of care, and understand the attitudes of older people and their carers to stopping unnecessary medicines.
Our research group prioritises education, mentorship, capacity building, collaboration and policy work. Several of Professor Hilmer’s PhD graduates and post-doctoral researchers have been awarded NHMRC fellowships, while many other students have gone on to conduct national and international post-doctoral research or study medicine or pharmacy. International early and mid-career researchers in geriatric pharmacology frequently spend time in our laboratory. Several of our researchers visit the laboratories of our collaborators nationally and internationally at leading research institutes such as the National Institute on Aging, Baltimore, USA.
Our team is part of the Penney Ageing Research Unit, which conducts aged care research on the Royal North Shore Hospital campus.
Conjoint Professor of Geriatric Pharmacology
Medicine, Northern Clinical School
Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Research Fellow
Associate Professor Susan Ogle - Clinical academic
Dr Constance Vogler - Clinical academic
Dr James Hardy - Clinical academic
Dr Helen Wu - Clinical academic
Dr Kevin Chang - Clinical academic
Sarita Lo - Research Pharmacist
Maureen Bartels - Administration officer
Mai Duong - PhD Student
Bonnie Liu – PhD Student
Kevin Winardi – Research Scientist
Mai Duong – PhD Student
Connie Vogler - Project Manager
Christine Lu - Professor (USyd Chair of Clinical Pharmancy)
(Temitope) Esther Afolabi - PhD Student
Duha Gide - PhD Student
Bridin Murnion - Staff Specialist
(Mohammad) Afshar Ali - Postdoctoral Research Associate
Bella Ianni - Intern Pharmacist
Noriko Sato - Senior Data Scientist
Nina Pham - Research Fellow (Pharmacy Practitioner)
Kate Johnstone - Honours Student
Leping (Victor) Kong - Research Assistant
Chin Hang (Benson) - Yiu - PhD student
NSLHD: Rehabilitation and Aged Care; University of Sydney: NHMRC Cognitive Decline Partnership Centre, Charles Perkins Centre Healthy Ageing Node
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