Anthony Rodgers

About Professor Anthony Rodgers

Professorial Fellow, Professoriate

  • Professor of Global Health, Faculty of Medicine, UNSW Sydney
  • Chair of Clinical Epidemiology, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College of London

Professor Rodgers has a track record in cardiovascular disease prevention, innovation and public-private partnerships, with an interest in scale-able interventions to address major risks to health. He is currently Acting Director of the Cardiovascular Division at The George Institute, Australia and Chair of Clinical Epidemiology, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College of London.

After graduating in medicine in the United Kingdom he trained in epidemiology and public health in New Zealand. He was the Principal Author of the 2002 World Health Report, the main annual publication for WHO. Professor Rodgers has led developments of an affordable four-in-one cardiovascular combination pill ('polypill'). He led a clinical trial program in economically developed and developing countries, funded by the Wellcome Trust, European Union and others.  

Professor Rodgers also developed a world first cell phone based smoking cessation programme for youth, which disseminated proven health support messages in an age-appropriate, affordable medium.  Over 6,000 patients were involved in clinical trials that demonstrated a 50% increase in quit rates. The service has been rolled out by Departments of Health in NZ, UK and India, with over 2 million users to date. A follow-on program delivering cognitive behavioural therapy for depression prevention was successfully trialled among 1,200 at-risk teenagers.

Economic evaluation of subcutaneous ketamine injections for treatment resistant depression: A randomised, double-blind, active-controlled trial - The KADS study

Journal of Affective Disorders Date published:

Prevalence of SGLT2 inhibitor and GLP1 receptor agonist prescriptions in type 2 diabetes patients with and without chronic kidney disease: Analysis of an Australian primary care dataset

Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism Date published:

Low-Dose Combinations With 3 or 4 Blood Pressure-Lowering Medications for the Treatment of Hypertension

JACC: Advances Date published:

The Potential of Single Pill Combinations

Journal of the American College of Cardiology Date published:

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