Professor Franz Babl is the Group Leader of Emergency Research at the Murdoch Children's Research Institute and the Professor of Paediatric Emergency Medicine at the University of Melbourne. He works as a paediatric emergency physician at The Royal Children's Hospital. He studied in Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States of America and trained in the USA as a paediatrician, emergency physician and infectious diseases physician.
He was the co-founder and founding chair of the Paediatric Research in Emergency Departments International Collaborative (PREDICT) network in Australia and New Zealand, and a current member of the executive committee. This network involves all major tertiary paediatric hospitals in Australia and New Zealand, with an annual census of half a million paediatric presentations. This collaboration is uniquely placed to conduct multicentre trials.
Professor Babl has conducted many collaborative studies with the PREDICT network. He is currently a mentor and supervisor to advanced trainees, PhD students and early career researchers at the Royal Children's Hospital and within PREDICT. He has published >350 peer reviewed publications including in the Lancet, New England Journal of Medicine and BMJ. He is Chief Investigator on a number of National Health and Medical Research Council and Medical Research Futures Fund funded studies. Total grant funding over his career is >$52 million. He is the director of an NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Paediatric Emergency Medicine.
Professor Franz Babl is the Group Leader of Emergency Research at the Murdoch Children's Research Institute and the Professor of Paediatric Emergency Medicine at the University of Melbourne. He works as a paediatric emergency physician at The Royal...
Professor Franz Babl is the Group Leader of Emergency Research at the Murdoch Children's Research Institute and the Professor of Paediatric Emergency Medicine at the University of Melbourne. He works as a paediatric emergency physician at The Royal Children's Hospital. He studied in Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States of America and trained in the USA as a paediatrician, emergency physician and infectious diseases physician.
He was the co-founder and founding chair of the Paediatric Research in Emergency Departments International Collaborative (PREDICT) network in Australia and New Zealand, and a current member of the executive committee. This network involves all major tertiary paediatric hospitals in Australia and New Zealand, with an annual census of half a million paediatric presentations. This collaboration is uniquely placed to conduct multicentre trials.
Professor Babl has conducted many collaborative studies with the PREDICT network. He is currently a mentor and supervisor to advanced trainees, PhD students and early career researchers at the Royal Children's Hospital and within PREDICT. He has published >350 peer reviewed publications including in the Lancet, New England Journal of Medicine and BMJ. He is Chief Investigator on a number of National Health and Medical Research Council and Medical Research Futures Fund funded studies. Total grant funding over his career is >$52 million. He is the director of an NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Paediatric Emergency Medicine.
Top Publications
Priestley, S, Babl, FE, Krieser, D, Law, A, Miller, J, Spicer, M, Tully, M.
Evaluation of the impact of a paediatric procedural sedation credentialing programme on quality of care.
Emergency Medicine Australasia
18(5‐6)
:
498 -504
2006
view publication
Babl, F, Priestley, S, Krieser, D, Miller, J, Tully, M, Spicer, M, McGowan, V, Dilla, N.
Development and implementation of an education and credentialing programme to provide safe paediatric procedural sedation in emergency departments.
Emergency Medicine Australasia
18(5‐6)
:
489 -497
2006
view publication
Babl, FE, Jamison, SR, Spicer, M, Bernard, S.
Inhaled methoxyflurane as a prehospital analgesic in children.
Emergency Medicine Australasia
18(4)
:
404 -410
2006
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Babl, FE, Munro, J, Kainey, G, Palmer, GM, Iser, A.
Scope for improvement: hospital wide sedation practice at a children’s hospital.
Archives of Disease in Childhood
91(8)
:
716
2006
view publication
Babl, FE, Lewena, S, Brown, L.
Vaccination-related Adverse Events.
Pediatric Emergency Care
22(7)
:
520 -522
2006
view publication