The Australian Pollen Allergen Partnership (AusPollen)

AIFA Research Grant 2015 for the better management of pollen exposure and respiratory health outcomes. 

Prof Janet Davies, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland.

Awarded National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) funding in 2016.

Assoc Prof Janet DaviesThis grant of $30,000 established Australia's first national standardised pollen monitoring program. This ensures reliable measurements and short term forecasts of allergenic pollen counts to the public via websites, apps and media outlets to bring real benefit to patients with allergic rhinitis (hay fever). Grass pollen is the main outdoor trigger for hay fever and allergic asthma in people with pollen allergies.

"Allergic rhinitis is one of the most common allergic conditions in Australia. It can make asthma worse and is generally under recognised and under treated," says award recipient A/Prof Janet Davies. "Pollens in the air are what trigger attacks of hay fever and, in many pollen allergic people, asthma. So being able to avoid pollen exposure is important. But while pollen forecasts are seemingly available on a number of websites, they're not based on real data and are inaccurate, in comparison to actual pollen counts produced by our team in Melbourne, Canberra and Sydney.

"Using the grant from AIFA, the Australian Pollen Allergen Partnership (APAP) will work towards establishing the first national standardised pollen monitoring program, spanning all Australian state and territory capital cities and offer readily accessible and reliable local and current pollen count information to patients and doctors through its website. It will also provide patient education material and evidence-based guidelines on pollen allergen exposure risks in different locations.

"Reliable pollen measurements and short term forecasts of allergenic grass pollen counts will be sent to the public via websites, apps and media outlets," says A/Prof Davies. "We're already publishing pollen forecasts via melbournepollen.com.au and canberrapollen.com.au and an app for Melbourne has generated over 20,000 downloads since the spring of 2013. To do this well, we need a standardized national pollen monitoring network to accurately forecast exposure to grass pollens that cause allergies."

In 2016 AIFA was delighted to annouce that this AusPollen project was awarded further recognition by receiving an NHMRC grant and further financial and in kind support. A/Prof Davies is now co-ordinating the project from the Queensland University of Technology.

The AusPollen program was initiated with the Australasian Society of Clinical Immunology and Allergy (ASCIA), Asthma Australia, Stallergenes Greer Australia, the Bureau of Meteorology, CSIRO and MeteoSwiss. For more information about AusPollen go to

https://auspollen.edu.au/ 

Read more about the progress of this project in the NHMRC Airborne pollen and respiratory allergies: Case Study on AusPollen 2023. The AusPollen partnership is an important research collaboration for ASCIA and was one of the first research projects supported by an AIFA research grant in 2015, when AIFA was first established. 

https://www.nhmrc.gov.au/about-us/resources/impact-case-studies/airborne-pollen-and-respiratory-allergies-case-study