- Date:
- 9 Oct 2022
We aim to improve the health and wellbeing of all Victorians by supporting health and medical research that aligns with our translational research priorities.
Our approach
We have developed 9 departmental translational research priorities and 5 underlying research principles. These support our organisational priority areas, as outlined in the Department of Health Operational Plan 2022–23, and delivery of the Victorian Health and Medical Research Strategy: 2022–32.
These priorities aim to:
- address key health or health system problems, challenges, or opportunities
- support the priority areas outlined in the Department of Health Operational Plan 2022–23
- address disparity or need in priority cohorts, groups, and communities
- reflect patient and consumer needs
- have tangible impacts on the health of Victorians.
Partnering with researchers
We want to progress priority research by:
- engaging with the research sector and health services to build research partnerships
- enabling priority research through funding (where possible) and access to data
- strengthening collaboration between researchers, consumers, and policymakers to translate research findings into policy and practice.
For more information on engaging with the department, please review the Department of Health Translational Research Priorities 2022-24, or contact the Health and Medical Research team at research@health.vic.gov.au.
For cancer specific research queries, please contact the Victorian Cancer Agency at victorian.canceragency@health.vic.gov.au.
Downloads
Translational research priorities 2022–24
The department has 9 translational research priorities for 2022-24 that aim to address health and health system problems or challenges.
Population and public health priorities
Health service delivery and system capability priorities
Research principles
Five research principles underpin all research supported by the Department of Health, ensuring that priority research is designed to maximise outcomes for all Victorians.
- Equity and inclusion: Research proactively addresses disparity or need, and is inclusive of priority cohorts, groups, and communities.
- Sex and gender: Research workforce and activity is inclusive of different sexes and genders, and includes analysis and reporting of sex and gender differences, where relevant.
- Person-centred: Research directly addresses patient and consumer needs by considering community perspectives and involvement.
- Collaboration: Research incorporates multidisciplinary perspectives, including economic considerations, where relevant.
- Translation: Research considers how knowledge can be transferred, with a clear pathway for findings to be translated into policy and practice.