photo of Dr Andres Noe

Dr Andres Noe

Dr Andres Noe

Details

Role Research Officer
Research area Population Health

Contact

Available for student supervision
Andrés is a Research Officer at the Murdoch Children's Research Institute and a paediatric trainee at the Royal Children's Hospital.

Andrés was the recipient of the prestigious Rhodes Scholarship for Western Australia in 2016. Andrés completed his medical training at the University of Western Australia in Perth and throughout rural Western Australia. There, he also completed his first-class honours BMedSci degree at the award-winning School of Women's and Infants' Health. Before moving to Oxford, Andrés worked as a junior doctor at Fiona Stanley Hospital, Perth, and taught medical students at the University of Western Australia.

At Oxford, he completed a MSc in International Health and Tropical Medicine and a Diploma of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. He completed his masters in Bangladesh and Thailand, focussing on malarial spatial epidemiology.

Andrés completed a DPhil in Clinical Medicine under the supervision of Professor Adrian Hill, Professor Sumi Biswas and Dr Alexandra Spencer. His research focussed on using bulk and single-cell RNA-sequencing and flow cytometry to determine correlates of liver-stage malaria vaccine efficacy and to evaluate the human immune response to the malaria transmission-blocking vaccine candidate Pfs25-IMX313.

Since returning to Australia, Andrés has begun establishing himself as a clinician-scientist in Melbourne. He worked at Royal Melbourne Hospital before beginning at MCRI.
Andrés is a Research Officer at the Murdoch Children's Research Institute and a paediatric trainee at the Royal Children's Hospital.

Andrés was the recipient of the prestigious Rhodes Scholarship for Western Australia in 2016. Andrés completed...
Andrés is a Research Officer at the Murdoch Children's Research Institute and a paediatric trainee at the Royal Children's Hospital.

Andrés was the recipient of the prestigious Rhodes Scholarship for Western Australia in 2016. Andrés completed his medical training at the University of Western Australia in Perth and throughout rural Western Australia. There, he also completed his first-class honours BMedSci degree at the award-winning School of Women's and Infants' Health. Before moving to Oxford, Andrés worked as a junior doctor at Fiona Stanley Hospital, Perth, and taught medical students at the University of Western Australia.

At Oxford, he completed a MSc in International Health and Tropical Medicine and a Diploma of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. He completed his masters in Bangladesh and Thailand, focussing on malarial spatial epidemiology.

Andrés completed a DPhil in Clinical Medicine under the supervision of Professor Adrian Hill, Professor Sumi Biswas and Dr Alexandra Spencer. His research focussed on using bulk and single-cell RNA-sequencing and flow cytometry to determine correlates of liver-stage malaria vaccine efficacy and to evaluate the human immune response to the malaria transmission-blocking vaccine candidate Pfs25-IMX313.

Since returning to Australia, Andrés has begun establishing himself as a clinician-scientist in Melbourne. He worked at Royal Melbourne Hospital before beginning at MCRI.