Skip to content
Education Training, Research Development

Women’s sport a winner in $11.7m MRFF grants

La Trobe University 2 mins read

A La Trobe University project to reduce concussion and knee injuries in women and girls’ community football has secured almost $5 million in Federal funding.

Professor Kay Crossley was one of four La Trobe academics to share in $11.7 million in the recently announced 2024 Medical Research Future Fund Clinical Trials Activity round.

The distinguished academic and Director of the La Trobe Sport and Exercise Medicine Research Centre was awarded $4.9 million to lead the projectHER trial in 28 community women and girls’ football leagues, involving more than 10,000 Australian Rules Football and soccer players.

Professor Crossley said projectHER would address barriers to injury-prevention programs being undertaken by coaches and players.

“We designed activities with coaches and players aimed at increasing the adoption of injury-prevention programs. Once we conduct these trials, we will look at ways to expand these activities nationwide,” Professor Crossley said.

“Sport participation has lifelong benefits, but women and girls who play sport have between two to eight times more risk of sustaining injuries than men and boys. This needs to change.”

Concussion injuries can lead to debilitating conditions such as impaired brain function and mental health, while knee injuries can result in early onset osteoarthritis for one in two people under 40.

La Trobe Deputy Vice-Chancellor Research and Innovation Professor Chris Pakes said the project addressed a significant issue affecting many Australians.

“It is great to see Kay’s important research continue to be supported,” Professor Pakes said. "Injury prevention is vital for women’s sport to continue to grow locally and nationally.

“I congratulate Kay and her team, as well as all other academics and researchers successful in this funding round. These projects are key examples of the research being undertaken at La Trobe that is having an impact on everyday lives.”

The projectHER trial is partnering with the Australian Football League, Football Australia, Federation Internationale de Football Association and Queensland University of Technology.

In total, La Trobe secured $11.7 million in MRFF grant funding. Other successful La Trobe-led research projects include:

Associate Professor Eliza Hawkes, La Trobe School of Cancer Medicine and Olivia Newton-John Cancer Research Institute, $3.4 million

This project aims to improve outcomes for patients with Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma (DLBCL), with an accessible, low-toxicity therapy using the potential synergy of T-cell activating therapy-glofitamab and low-dose radiotherapy in rDLBCL, compared with standard care.

Associate Professor Adam Culvenor, School of Allied Health, Human Services and Sport, $2.7 million

This project, known as the KOBRA trial, aims to test the clinical and cost effectiveness of an easily accessible, low-cost, low-risk intervention for post-traumatic knee osteoarthritis, using a slim-fit knee brace.

Associate Professor Hui Gan, La Trobe School of Cancer Medicine and Olivia Newton-John Cancer Research Institute, $798,137

This project aims to test whether patients with glioblastoma (GBM), a rare brain tumour, can be better treated with new therapies, rather than chemo-radiation.

 

 

Media enquiries

Robyn Grace – [email protected], 0420 826 595

More from this category

  • Education Training, Union
  • 13/03/2026
  • 08:41
National Tertiary Education Union

University of Melbourne staff push for four-day week and protection from AI

University of Melbourne staff are pushing for a four-day working week for professional staff, a 20 percent pay rise and new safeguards against artificial intelligence under claims lodged with management. The National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) served its log of claims on the university on Thursday, opening negotiations for a new enterprise agreement. The claims also include enforceable workload protections for academics. The four-day week - sought for professional staff without any reduction in pay - is a key part of the union's push, alongside a demand to strip management of its unilateral power to set academic workloads. Under the…

  • Education Training, Indigenous
  • 12/03/2026
  • 12:05
Charles Darwin University

Yol?u man charts new course for his homelands

AYolÅ‹u man is excited to lure in adventure tourists thanks to his passion to start an eco-tourism venture, with the support of Charles Darwin…

  • Contains:
  • Business Company News, Education Training
  • 12/03/2026
  • 10:33
La Trobe University

La Trobe start-ups to get helping hand in Australia-first agreement

La TrobeUniversitystart-ups will have unique access to potential investors, industry mentors and strategic partners in the United States,Europeand Asiathrough an Australia-first agreement with Silicon Valley-basedinnovation platformPlug and Play. As the Universityenhancesits support for translating research into commercial reality, the agreement will enable three start-upsayear to gain valuable support from Plug and Play’s GOAL program todrive business growth opportunities. The three-year agreement will expose start-ups to strategic opportunities to connect withpotentialpartners and investors and learn from experienced executives and domain experts, including support withbusiness development, fundraising, mentoring, and business coaching. La Trobe University is the first Australian university to sign with…

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.