Who we are

The way doctors practice medicine is changing. Your DNA can help them better understand, diagnose, and predict health conditions. It’s a fast growing area and will soon be a regular part of your healthcare. 

Right now, millions of Australians may miss out on these advances in healthcare. That’s because many Australian communities are underrepresented in the resources doctors and researchers rely on to identify and diagnose health conditions.

OurDNA is partnering with communities to include ancestry groups who are mostly missing from genetic and medical research resources. We work with multicultural organisations, community leaders and communities to build genetic resources that represent all communities.

These resources will help make healthcare better for all Australians — for you, your family and your community.

 

The Centre for Population Genomics

 

OurDNA is a flagship project of the Centre for Population Genomics.
The Centre for Population Genomics is a collaboration between the Garvan Institute of Medical Research in Sydney and the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute in Melbourne.

What resources are we building?

A searchable, public database of genetic information

The OurDNA database will contain summary genetic information of Australians to help doctors and researchers find the information they need to identify or study health conditions.

Doctors and researchers will be able to see trends and patterns in the information, but not who the information came from.

A secure bank of genetic and health information for future medical research

The OurDNA databank will safely keep the genetic and health information of people who take part in OurDNA.

It is a resource that can be studied by health and medical researchers working to benefit Australian communities. Researchers will not be able to see any personal details of the people who have taken part in OurDNA.

A secure bank of blood samples that have been donated for future medical research

OurDNA will collect people’s blood and blood cell samples and keep them safe for researchers to study in the future.

The OurDNA sample bank will help to make health and medical research that benefits Australian communities easier to do in the future.

Join now and make a difference

Meet the team

The OurDNA team is passionate about inclusivity and equity in health and medical research.

Our community partners

Working with communities is the heart of OurDNA’s mission. With our community partners’ help, we hope to engage thousands of Australians from diverse communities to be part of OurDNA and shape the future of healthcare.

Do you have questions?

If you can’t find the answer you’re looking for, contact us.

OurDNA is a flagship project of the Centre for Population Genomics. The Centre is set up to:

  • Include under-represented communities in genomic research;
  • Explore the function and health relevance of human genes; and
  • Improve the diagnosis and treatment of genetic diseases. 

The Centre is a not-for-profit joint initiative from two of Australia’s leading research institutes: the Garvan Institute of Medical Research in Sydney and the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute in Melbourne.

OurDNA is partnering with communities to include ancestry groups who are mostly missing from medical research. We work with multicultural organisations, community leaders and communities to build genetic resources that represent all communities.

The genetic resources that OurDNA is building will enable all Australians in future generations to benefit from advancements in medical research. Read more about what we’re doing here.

OurDNA is funded by: 

  • The Centre for Population Genomics’ founding institutions: Garvan Institute of Medical Research and Murdoch Children’s Research Institute
  • People who donate funds to our research
  • Funding for this research has also been provided by the Australian Government’s Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF) grant 2015969 (CIA Daniel MacArthur; 2022-2027) from the Genomics Health Futures Mission and by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) investigator grant 2009982 (CIA Daniel MacArthur; 2022-2026). The contents of this published material are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not reflect the views of the Commonwealth of Australia or the NHMRC.
  • The OurDNA program also receives support from Google’s Digital Future Initiative. Read more about this collaboration here.

OurDNA is currently funded until the end of 2027. It is our intention to continue our work until all Australian communities are represented and for the OurDNA database and sample bank to be available for as long as possible for researchers. 

Yes, the OurDNA project has been approved by the certified Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC) of the Royal Children’s Hospital. The reference for our ethics approval is: HREC/91986/RCHM-2023

If you have any questions about the OurDNA ethics approval process, or wish to speak to someone independent of the research team, you may contact the Director of Research Operations at The Royal Children’s Hospital. You can phone the Director on (03) 9345 5044 or email them at rch.ethics@rch.org.au

At the moment, Australians from the following ancestry groups are under represented or entirely missing in genetic resources:

  • East African (e.g., Ethiopian, Ghanaian, Kenyan, Mauritian, Somali, South Sudanese, and Sudanese)
  • North African and Middle Eastern (e.g., Assyrian, Chaldean, Egyptian, Iranian, Iraqi, Lebanese, Palestinian, Syrian and Turkish)
  • Oceanian (e.g., Fijian, Mãori, Papua New Guinean, Samoan, and Tongan)
  • South-East Asian (e.g., Cambodian, Filipino, Indonesian, Malay, Thai, and Vietnamese)

Australian doctors have also told us that it is hard to find information about these ancestry groups in the resources and databases they use to diagnose genetic and health conditions. 

OurDNA is working to engage with the communities underrepresented in genetic resources. Visit this page to check which communities we are actively working with.

While we are not working directly in Indigenous communities, we are an active member of the ALIGN and CONNECT consortia, national Indigenous-led efforts that are working to empower Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in genomic medicine and research.

We provide technical advice for the development of genomic data infrastructure for nationally consistent, culturally appropriate, ethical storage, management, and sharing of genomic data to benefit Indigenous Australians.