Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care, Research Development

$10.8 million gift establishes new research chair at UNSW

UNSW Sydney 2 mins read

17 February 2026

 $10.8 million gift establishes new research chair at UNSW

UNSW Sydney has received a unique $10.8 million philanthropic commitment from the Sarks Macular Degeneration Research Foundation to establish the Shirley and John Sarks Chair in Age-related Macular Degeneration, strengthening Australia’s capacity to address age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and other blinding eye diseases.

The gift will support the creation of a new Chair to advance ophthalmology and vision science excellence. The role will be filled through an international recruitment process, attracting a world-leading researcher or physician-researcher to UNSW’s Faculty of Medicine & Health.

AMD is the leading cause of irreversible vision loss in developed countries. In Australia, around one in seven people over the age of 50 have signs of the condition, with more than 1.5 million Australians affected — a number expected to grow as the population ages. AMD leads to progressive loss of central vision, making everyday activities such as reading, driving and recognising faces increasingly difficult.

UNSW Sydney Vice-Chancellor and President Professor Attila Brungs said the gift would have a profound and lasting impact on eye and vision research.

“This visionary gift reflects an extraordinary commitment to advancing medical research that drives real progress for all and a profound and lasting impact,” Prof. Brungs said.

“The Shirley and John Sarks Chair in Age-related Macular Degeneration will support UNSW researchers at the forefront of global efforts to better understand, prevent and treat macular degeneration.”

Dr John Sarks AM, now 94, is internationally recognised as a pioneer in ophthalmology and retinal research, whose work has helped shape modern understanding of macular degeneration.

Together with his late wife and long-time research partner, Dr Shirley Sarks AM, he spent decades studying the disease. He said the donation is the culmination of his and his wife’s lifetime dedication to improving sight. The establishment of the Chair also ensures that innovation in the field continues well into the future.

“Macular degeneration remains a major challenge, and there is still much to learn,” Dr Sarks said.

“My hope is that this Chair will support researchers to keep asking difficult questions and to continue pushing towards better treatments and outcomes for patients.”

As part of their lifelong work, Drs Shirley and John Sarks collected hundreds of samples of human eye tissue to better understand the progression of the disease. The collection includes detailed clinical histories and is regarded as one of the most comprehensive and valuable resources of its kind in the world.

UNSW Dean of Medicine & Health Professor Cheryl Jones said the establishment of the Chair offers new hope for the millions of people burdened with sight-related disease, and continues the legacy of the Sarks’ collaborative approach to careful observation, persistence and research.

“The Shirley and John Sarks Chair in Age-related Macular Degeneration will enable UNSW to attract a world-leading expert in a highly specialised and competitive field, strengthening our progress in tackling this debilitating disease,” Prof. Jones said.

The Shirley and John Sarks Chair in Age-related Macular Degeneration will focus on AMD and related retinal diseases and is expected to be filled following an international search.

 

For more information, please contact:

Julia Holman, UNSW Sydney, 0435 124 673 or [email protected]


Contact details:

Julia Holman, UNSW Sydney, 0435 124 673 or [email protected]

Media

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 06/03/2026
  • 06:00
Health Services Union

HSU urges federal government to make reproductive health leave a national employment standard

HSU urges federal government to make reproductive health leave a national employment standard The Health Services Union has used its submission to the Inquiry into the operation and adequacy of the National Employment Standard to argue for universal reproductive health leave. HSU, along with other unions, has been campaigning for 12 days of paid leave for reproductive health issues. The leave would cover speciality appointments and treatments relating to reproductive organs, including screenings for breast and prostate cancer, or the management of symptoms related to reproductive health, including periods, perimenopause, PCOS, endometriosis, vasectomy and hysterectomy, miscarriage and medical pregnancy terminations…

  • Medical Health Aged Care, Regional Country Services
  • 06/03/2026
  • 05:04
Council of Presidents of Medical Colleges

Medical colleges commit to national reform on specialist access and affordability for all Australians

For patients in regional and remote Australia, the specialist they need is too often simply not there. More than 80 per cent of Australia’s specialists practise in metropolitan areas, despite nearly a third of the population living outside the cities. Potentially preventable hospitalisations are 30 per cent higher in outer regional areas and 70 per cent higher in remote communities. At a two-day summit at Parliament House, Australia’s 16 specialist medical colleges have committed to working with state and Federal governments to reform how and where specialists are trained and have set new national standards on ethical billing and fee…

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 05/03/2026
  • 17:11
Galderma Group AG

Galderma Delivers Record 2025 Results With Net Sales of 5.207 Billion USD, up 17.7% at Constant Currency1, and Core EBITDA2 of 1.211 billion USD, Growing 18.9% at Constant Currency

Ad hoc announcement pursuant to Art. 53 LR ZUG, Switzerland–BUSINESS WIRE– Galderma Group AG (SIX:GALD), the pure-play dermatology category leader, today announced its financial…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.