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Dr Jackie Whittaker
Dr. Jackie Whittaker is an Assistant Professor, physiotherapist and clinician-scientist in the Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine at the University of Alberta (Canada). She is recognized as a Clinical Specialist in Musculoskeletal Physiotherapy by the Canadian Physiotherapy Association, is an Adjunct Professor at the IOC funded Sport Injury Prevention Research Centre at the University of Calgary (Canada), and an Associate Member of the Arthritis Research UK Centre for Sport, Exercise and OA. Her research focuses on prevention of youth sport injuries and their consequences, particularly physical inactivity and post-traumatic OA. Jackie’s research is guided by 21 years of clinical practice, which allows her to move freely along the knowledge generation-translation continuum. |

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Dr Rintje Agricola
Dr Rintje Agricola is a registrar in orthopaedic surgery at the Erasmus University Medical Centre Rotterdam (Netherlands). He received his PhD on the etiology of FAI syndrome in athletes during skeletal growth and its risk for development of OA later in life. He collaborated with internationally renowned experts in the field and published articles on this topic in highly ranked journals including Lancet and Nature Reviews Rheumatology. He was awarded a 3 month fellowship at Oxford University, UK, in 2013 and he joined a 3 month fellowship at Aspetar, Qatar in 2015. He has received several awards and grants to build his research group in order to further study the development of FAI syndrome in young athletes and its future risk of hip OA. |

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Professor Kay Crossley
Professor Kay Crossley is the Director of the La Trobe Sport and Exercise Medicine Research Centre. Kay is a physiotherapist with many years of experience in clinical sports physiotherapy. She has contributed to a number of sports medicine and physiotherapy texts, including every edition of Brukner and Khan’s Clinical Sports Medicine. Her research focus is on the prevention and management of patellofemoral pain and the development and prevention of osteoarthritis following sports related injuries, with fields in patellofemoral osteoarthritis following patellofemoral pain, knee osteoarthritis following ACL reconstruction and hip OA following hip-related injuries (including FAI and labral tears). Kay has obtained funding from major competitive granting bodies and has published over 100 peer-review papers. |
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Dr Adam Culvenor
Dr Adam Culvenor is a physiotherapist and Senior Research Fellow at the La Trobe Sport and Exercise Medicine Research Centre. Adam’s research focusses on the prevention and management of knee osteoarthritis over the lifespan. From preventing knee injuries, identifying clinical and biomechanical risk factors for post-traumatic osteoarthritis, developing and testing novel osteoarthritis prevention strategies in young adults, through to older adults undergoing total knee replacement – its impact on individuals and society, and effective surgical and non-surgical interventions. He has authored over 50 peer-reviewed publications in these areas.
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Dr Joanne Kemp
Dr Joanne Kemp is a Senior Research Fellow at the La Trobe Sport and Exercise Medicine Research Centre. She is also a titled APA Sport & Exercise Physiotherapist of 25+ years’ experience. She has 50 peer-reviewed publications in hip and knee pain and early onset osteoarthritis (OA) in young and middle-aged adults, and the consequence of injury on joint health. She is co-project lead for GLA:D Australia. Joanne has presented extensively on the management of hip pain and OA in Australia and internationally. She has a particular interest in non-surgical, exercise-based interventions that can slow the progression and reduce the symptoms associated with hip pain and OA. |

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Dr Michael Makdissi
Dr Michael Makdissi is a Sport & Exercise Physician and a Fellow of the Australsian College of Sport and Exercise Physicians (FACSEP). He has worked with a range of sports including Australian Rules football, netball, cricket, rugby league, track and field, cycling, swimming, gymnastics, boxing and volleyball from recreational through to elite levels. Michael has also been part of the Australian medical team at the World University Games (Degu, Ismir), Commonwealth Games (Delhi, Glasgow) and Olympics Games (London). He currently works with the Hawthorn football club. Michael has a special interest in concussion, hip and groin pain, osteoarthritis, stress fractures, child and adolescent athletes and injury prevention. |

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Dr Andrea Mosler
Dr. Andrea Mosler is a Specialist Sports Physiotherapist and NHMRC Research Fellow at La Trobe University where she is currently working on hip-related groin pain, injury prevention, and women in sport research projects. Her PhD research was conducted while she worked at Aspetar, Qatar as Senior Physiotherapist and Head of CME/CPD and investigated the risk factors for hip and groin pain in professional male football players. Andrea previously worked as a clinician for 18 years at the Australian Institute of Sport and has been an Australian team physiotherapist at many sporting events including the 2000, 2004 and 2008 Olympics Games. |
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Justin Crow
Justin Crow is Physical Performance Manager at Essendon Football Club. He is recognised as an Elite Strength and Conditioning coach under the ASCA Pro-Scheme. He is also a qualified Physiotherapist and has completed Master’s level degrees in both Applied Science (Exercise Rehabilitation) and Enterprise (Executive Leadership). Justin both played for the Collingwood Football Club and worked there as rehabilitation coach for the 2010 premiership. Justin has published research relating to adductor screening, muscle activation and workload management. |