On this page: Ron Borland | James Balmford | Bill King | Anita Lal | Jonathan Liberman | Cathy Segan | David Young | Hua Yong
Nigel Gray Distinguished Fellow in Cancer Prevention
Trained in psychology, Ron has worked in tobacco control since shortly after joining the (then) Anti-Cancer Council's Centre for Behavioural Research in Cancer in 1986. He was the Inaugual Director of VCTC, a position he relinquished in 2004 when he took up his current position.
Ron has published over 150 peer-reviewed papers, most on topics in tobacco control. Ron's expertise covers much of tobacco control. He has an international reputation for his work on smoking cessation and on evaluating the impact of policy changes and programs (including media campaigns) on smokers.
Senior Research Officer
James has a PhD from Monash University. He was a recipient of a National Heart Foundation Postgraduate Public Health Research Scholarship for study in the area of refining stage of change models for smoking cessation.
His work at VCTC has mainly involved the development and evaluation of computer-based programs tailoring smoking cessation and prevention materials to the experience of the user. He was also a major contributor to a 2001 review of policy and programs to reduce exposure to environmental tobacco smoke in Australia.
James' major interests are understanding barriers to cessation, and using information technology to both improve the effectiveness of programs and to deliver them to a wider audience. He is a co-PI on our EQuit study which is exploring the role of telephone messaging as a smoking cessation aid.
Research Officer
Bill has an MSc in History and Philosophy of Science and is currently working on a PhD. His current research is focused on documenting the changing construction and ingredients of Australian cigarettes and determining the tobacco industry's purposes in bringing about these changes. The principal aim of this research is to strengthen the case for new ways of regulating the construction and ingredients of cigarettes so as to better manage the public health impacts of cigarette smoking and to prevent smokers being misinformed about the risks they face.
Research Officer
Anita completed a Master of Public Health in early 2007 with an emphasis on health economics. Her work at the Cancer Council has focused on the economic aspects of tobacco control such as the impact of smokefree policies on revenue in hospitality and gaming venues and the economic evaluation of smoking cessation interventions.
Director of Law and Regulation of the VicHealth Centre for Tobacco Control and Cancer Council Victoria
Jonathan has provided legal and regulatory advice on tobacco-related issues since 1998 and played a key role in advocacy for law reform both at the domestic and international levels. Jonathan is also Chair of the policy committee of the Framework Convention Alliance, an international NGO working on the development and implementation of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, an international treaty designed to reduce the harm caused by tobacco globally.
Honorary Research Associate of Cancer Council Victoria
Cathy became the Honorary Research Associate in October 2005 after leaving VCTC to take up a NHMRC Post-Doctoral Fellowship; at the Program Evaluation Unit, School of Population Health, University of Melbourne. Cathy's research is concerned with the development and evaluation of Quit Victoria's smoking cessation services, in particular the Quitline. NHMRC-funded projects are examining research questions such as: Can extra Quitline callbacks help ex-smokers embrace a smoke-free lifestyle and reduce rates of smoking relapse? Does quitting smoking reduce your risk of osteoporosis?, and Does general practitioner fax-referral to the Quitline improve patient smoking outcomes?.
A recently awarded Beyond Blue grant will investigate the Quitline's effectiveness for smokers with a history of depression. Cathy is also actively involved in teaching Program Evaluation to Masters of Public Health students.
Sally Birch Fellow in Cancer Control
David Young is the inaugural Sally Birch Fellow in Cancer Control, awarded by the Cancer Council Australia. He's currently working with the Knowledge Building Team at Cancer Council Victoria. Before this David was a consultant, and has submitted a PhD thesis - 'Innovation in Sociotechnical Systems' - based on his consulting experience. The main focus of David's work with us has been on how to optimise the translation of scientific research into practice in cancer control, using the relationship between Knowledge Building and Quit, the thrust to Smoke-free places, and the growing debate over product regulation and 'safer' forms of nicotine as case studies.
David has also been working on data from the International Tobacco Control Policy Evaluation Survey (ITCPES) since 2004. In particular, he has prepared a report for the Australian Government on the relationship between the Australian results and those of the US, Canada and the UK; and peer-reviewed papers on Australian smokers' attitudes to increased regulation of the tobacco industry and market; the prevalence of correlates of Roll-Your-Own (RYO) use in Australia, Canada, the US and the UK, and the prevalence and correlates of RYO use in Thailand and Malaysia. He has presented papers on these topics at national and international conferences, including the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco in Prague, The Australian National Tobacco Control Conference in Sydney and the World Conference on Tobacco or Health in Washington.
David is also an Honorary Research Fellow at Monash University, as well as a member of the Complex Processes Research Group at Swinburne University and the Actor-Network Theory Group at Melbourne University.
Behavioural Scientist
Hua has a background in psychology and works on a number of international collaborative research projects like the International Tobacco Control 4-Country Survey (ITC-4) and the International Tobacco Control Southeast Asia Survey (ITC-SEA).
The ITC-4 is a longitudinal study conducted on nationally representative sample of over 9,000 respondents from 4 countries: Canada, US, UK and Australia, followed up annually. The ITC-4 started in October 2002 and aimed to evaluate the psychosocial and behavioural effects of national and subnational tobacco control policies on adult smokers in these 4 countries.
The ITC-SEA is a parallel study that began In early 2005 and was conducted in 2 developing countries: Malaysia and Thailand. Hua's research interests include psychosocial predictors of smoking and quitting behaviour, culture and smoking, and smoking among older people.