Project number: 2005-403
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $15,525.00
Principal Investigator: Phil Hansbro
Organisation: University of Newcastle
Project start/end date: 24 Oct 2005 - 30 May 2009
Contact:
FRDC

Need

Asthma is a common and increasing condition that affects people of all ages and around 2.2 million people in Australia. In children, asthma is the most common chronic illness that causes loss of time from school. The prevalence of asthma has doubled in the past 20 years and now affects 1 in 10 adults and 1 in 4 children. The annual cost of asthma to the health care system is estimated to be at least $720 million, which does not include time lost in absence from work or school. Asthma has now been listed as a National Health Priority Area by the Commonwealth Government and by both the NHMRC and the ARC, which are the major national competitive scientific funding bodies. This listing recognises the large and increasing burden of illness caused by asthma in Australia, as well as the recognised potential to achieve major health gains through improved prevention and treatment strategies for asthma. Research is urgently needed to identify ways to improve asthma control and reduce asthma prevalence.

Our proposed project is in line with the FRDC priorities and R&D plans in that we will promote the benefits of consuming biomolecules contained in fish and shellfish as well as whole foods. The definitive results obtained in the study will significantly reinforce and complement the benefits of eating seafood described in the SSA publication “What’s so healthy about seafood”. In combination with TUNRA and SSA we will actively promote the consumption of these items both in the medical and wider community, which will provide significant new commercial opportunities for the seafood industry.

Objectives

1. To demonstrate conclusively that the consumption components of fish oil and mussels can both prevent and treat against the development of asthma in adults.
2. To demonstrate conclusively that the consumption of whole seafoods can also prevent and treat against the development of asthma in adults.
3. To demonstrate conclusively that the consumption of components of fish oils and mussels and whole seafoods can prevent and treat the development of asthma in infants.

Related research

Environment
Communities
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2023-085
PROJECT STATUS:
CURRENT

Snapper Science Program: Theme 1 - Biology and Ecology

1. Quantify the abundance of age 0+ Snapper in northern Spencer Gulf and Gulf St Vincent to provide relative estimates of recruitment for 2024, 2025, and 2026. Examine the otoliths of these fish to improve the understanding of early life history processes.
ORGANISATION:
Flinders University