Working groups
Jane is a Senior Operational Epidemiologist and co-head of the Pacific Infectious Diseases (Operational Research, Surveillance and Resilience) Working Group. With this working group she is supporting outbreak response resilience in the Pacific region. She is also supporting program implementation and research activities of the TB Elimination and Implementation Science working group.
Jane is an epidemiologist (MAppEpid) with a biomedical science research background (PhD). She has health-related research, analysis and programmatic experience for over 20 years in non-government, government, private industry and academic settings. Her extensive experience working in international epidemiology/public health and humanitarian response includes more than 15 years with the international emergency medical humanitarian NGO Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) as a field epidemiologist, epidemiology advisor and health information system content specialist for activities in more than 30 countries.
Her field epidemiology work has encompassed field support in various countries during outbreak investigation and response including severe lead poisoning, meningitis, cholera, Ebola, COVID-19, Legionnaires’ disease. She has undertaken field work to support programs in a range of countries including Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Zimbabwe, Swaziland, Belarus, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Nepal, Myanmar, Malaysia, Colombia, Papua New Guinea (PNG).
Jane has undertaken operational research arising from routine programme activities and to support organisational strategic objectives, including research related to outbreak interventions (lead poisoning, meningococcal disease, Ebola) and programmes managing TB and HIV in challenging settings. She supports operational research capacity exchange through leading modules and mentoring participants of the structure operational research and training initiative (SORT-iT) in PNG, as a field supervisor for Master of Applied Epidemiology field epidemiology training program (FETP) scholars and project supervisor of Master of Public Health student projects, and as a member of the GOARN Research Technical Working Group.
Social Science & Medicine
Somu Nosi, Jane Greig, Herick Aeno, Priscah Hezeri, Priscah Hezeri, Jane Greig, Herick Aeno, Somu Nosi, Herick Aeno, Jane Greig
Social Science & Medicine
Somu Nosi, Jane Greig, Herick Aeno, Priscah Hezeri, Priscah Hezeri, Jane Greig, Herick Aeno, Somu Nosi, Herick Aeno, Jane Greig
Social Science & Medicine
Somu Nosi, Jane Greig, Herick Aeno, Priscah Hezeri, Priscah Hezeri, Jane Greig, Herick Aeno, Somu Nosi, Herick Aeno, Jane Greig
Tuberculosis (TB) is the second leading cause of death in Papua New Guinea). There is an urgent need for accurate, battery operated and cheaper TB diagnostics.
In 2022-2023, Burnet is facilitating PNG's second Structured Operational Research and Training Initiative (SORT-IT) course, with a cohort of nine senior healthcare professionals from six provinces. The course is implemented in partnership with the National Department of Health, University of PNG, and PNG Institute of Medical Research.
This community-centred public health project will screen all residents of Daru, Papua New Guinea to detect, treat and prevent tuberculosis.