Protecting babies' brains for the future
Protecting babies' brains for the future

Associate Professor Max Berry has dedicated her research and career to safeguarding babies’ brains. As a neonatal intensive care specialist, she asks herself daily how she can safeguard the neurodevelopmental potential and wellbeing of babies throughout New Zealand. In 2018, Dr Berry received a project grant from the Neurological Foundation to investigate a very special treatment called neurosteroid analogue therapy to prevent the many behavioural and neurodevelopmental disorders concerned with premature birth. This event will focus on what has already been discovered and what Dr Berry and her team are working towards for future therapies for premature babies.

 

ABOUT ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR MAX BERRY

Associate Professor Max Berry obtained her Bachelor of Science in Developmental Neurobiology from the University of London, prior to completion of undergraduate medical training at Guys and St Thomas’s Hospitals, London. She obtained a Membership of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Heath in the UK just before emigrating to New Zealand, where she completed her training in neonatal and perinatal medicine in Hamilton and Wellington. In 2008, Dr Berry was awarded an HRC (Health Research Council) Fellowship for PhD studies. Dr Berry received a project grant from the Neurological Foundation in 2018 to investigate behavioural and neurodevelopmental disorders in children and adolescents born preterm.

Zoom
Protecting babies' brains for the future
18:30 PM
Thursday, 24 March 2022
Register Now
Protecting babies' brains for the future
Protecting babies' brains for the futureZoom Protecting babies' brains for the future18:30 PM Thursday, 24 March 2022 Register Now
Protecting babies' brains for the future

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