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The Dr Ross Ingram Memorial Essay Competition

Indigenous health: tell us your story

The Dr Ross Ingram Memorial Essay Competition is open to any Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander person who is working, researching or training in a health-related field; we are looking for essays that present original and positive ideas aimed at promoting health gains and health equity for Australia’s Indigenous peoples. After all, real insights and solutions come from within, not from without.

Winning entries are published in the Journal's Indigenous Health issue (the second issue in May each year), and attract a prize of $5000. Other essays of high merit may also be published.

The essays should be no more than 2000 words long, and must be submitted by Friday, 29 January 2010. A panel, including external experts and MJA editorial staff, will judge finalist essays, and judges will be blinded to the identities of the authors. The judges’ decision will be final.

Previous winners of the competition

2009

 

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Winning Essay: Antecedents of chronic kidney disease in Aboriginal offenders in New South Wales prisons
Beverley F Spiers — Med J Aust 2009; 190 (10): 524-526.

2008

 

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Winning Essay: The heart of the matter is, that it’s a matter of the heart
Barry N Fewquandie — Med J Aust 2008; 188 (10): 580-582.

2006

 

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Winning Essay: Unknown family at the taxi stand
Dennis McDermott — Med J Aust 2006; 184 (10): 519-520.

2005

 

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Winning Essay: Fish traps — a significant part of our health and wellbeing
Geoffrey A Angeles — Med J Aust 2005; 182 (10): 541-543.

Ross Ingram (16  Feb 1967 – 15 May 2003)

Ross Ingram was an Indigenous doctor who died in 2003, aged 36, of cardiovascular disease. At the time of his sudden death he was working as a GP in the New South Wales rural town of Leeton.

Ross grew up in the Leeton area, where he was educated at the local primary and high schools. In 1984 he was named Young Citizen of the Year for Leeton, and in 1985, while vice-captain of Leeton High School, he received a Rotary Citizenship Award. In 1987 he was awarded a National Aboriginal Islander Day Observance Committee (NAIDOC) Award for Aboriginal Youth of the Year.

Ross was the first Indigenous person from NSW to be accepted into the University of Newcastle’s Medical School. He enrolled in 1986 and graduated in 1993, the first Wiradjuri person to become a doctor. Life and medicine took him to an internship and residency in Gosford, then general practice on the NSW central coast and in Tasmania, and finally back to practise in Wiradjuri Country (central western New South Wales). His death is the first among the small community of Indigenous doctors who have been graduating from Australian medical schools since 1984.

A keen practitioner of softball, football and cricket, as well as medicine, Ross was proud of his achievements both as a man and an Indigenous man. He is remembered by a loving family, including his wife, Julie, three children and three stepchildren.


The Medical Journal of Australia, Sydney, NSW.

Ruth M Armstrong, BMed, Deputy Editor; Martin B Van Der Weyden, MD, FRACP, FRCPA, Editor.

Correspondence: Dr Ruth M Armstrong, The Medical Journal of Australia, Locked Bag 3030, Strawberry Hills, NSW 2012. medjaustATampco.com.au

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©The Medical Journal of Australia 2004 www.mja.com.au ISSN: 0025-729X

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