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Status: Funded!
Children of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander descent experience some of the highest rates of ear
disease in the world. Chronic ear disease, known as otitis media with effusion (OME),
typically results from an infection in the middle ear causing significant pain and hearing loss as fluid
accumulates behind the eardrum. Up to 70% of Indigenous children in the first few years of life are
affected, leading to permanent hearing loss and developmental delay. Yet it is not known
why Indigenous children experience higher rates of, and more severe, OME. Our team has
the capacity to identify the immunological and microbiological causes for otitis media in Indigenous
children. Previously we isolated a bacterial species known as Alloiococcus otitidis from NSW Indigenous
children requiring surgical intervention for OME, but the role of this species in disease needs further
research.