User:MargaretRDonald/sandbox/Adrian G. Barnett


 * Scholia Adrian G.Barnett

Adrian Gerard Barnett (Adrian Barnett) was awarded a first class honours B.Sc. in statistics from the University College London in 1994, and a Ph.D in 2002 from the University of Queensland. On graduating from UCL he worked as a statistician for SmithKline Beecham and for the Medical Research Council (of Great Britain) before coming to Australia to study for his Ph.D in mathematics.

He is a professor in the faculty of Health in the school of Public Health and Social Work, at Queensland University of Technology and currently (2018-2020) president of the Statistical Society of Australia.

Barnett is committed to open research and concerned to make medical science more reproducible and less wasteful, and, together with colleagues, lodges prospective study protocols on F1000Research where they can be critiqued by the world wide community. In part, as a result of this commitment, he collaborates with scientists from New Zealand, from China, from the US, as well as from Australia.

He has published articles on environmental health,      in particular, on the effects of high temperatures on work related injuries, on death rates,  on other temperature-related health issues,  and on the statistical methods for the analysis of such data. Much of his work has been towards improving hospitals. Air pollution and its effects on health is another area to which he and his colleagues have made many contributions.

His work on public health has meant that he enters the public arena to attempt to bring scientific knowledge into the public debate. Thus at the time of the 2014 Hazelwood mine fire in the Latrobe Valley, Barnett publicly criticised the handling of the fire, arguing that at least 11 additional deaths resulted from the long-burning fire and its toxic smoke. and served as an expert witness in the inquiry which followed. He has criticised air quality standards in Australia as giving apparently safe cut-offs for air pollution concentrations whereas his and others' work shows that there are no safe levels for air pollutants, and thus the "standards" increase Australians' health risks,  and used "the Conversation" to further discuss issues concerning the toxicity of air pollution to the public.