Dr Michelle Scoullar
Senior Research Fellow - Women’s, Children’s and Adolescents’ Health. Paediatrician.
Working groups

Background
Michelle is a Paediatrician and International health specialist experienced in health system strengthening, health worker training, maternal, newborn and child health, and implementation research. She is also a Principal Investigator on Burnet’s flagship Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies (HMHB) program based in East New Britain, Papua New Guinea (PNG), and a PhD candidate.
Whilst Michelle was the Research Program Manager for HMHB based in East New Britain, she established the HMHB field site which included the cementing of all key partnerships, the establishment of a physical office, the building of a research laboratory and the hiring, training, and management of an administrative and technical research team. She managed the successful completion of a large longitudinal cohort study, which is the first of its kind in PNG, following women and their infant from early pregnancy through to twelve months postpartum.
Michelle’s research focuses on improving poor newborn and child growth, especially in PNG, and understanding how nutrition and infection in pregnancy impacts on infant health.
Michelle’s clinical work currently focuses on caring for children and young people with long COVID, and together with Dr Suman Majumdar, Dr Emma Tippett and a team of collaborators, she has received funding from the Medical Research Future Fund to pursue this important area of research.
Qualifications
- Fellow Royal Australasian College of Physicians (Paediatrician)
- Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS), Monash University
- Masters in International Health (MIH), Monash University/Burnet Institute
- Diploma in Obstetrics and Gynaecology (DRANZCOG)
Appointments
- The Royal Australasian College of Physicians
- The Royal Australian and New Zealand of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists
Positions
- 2023–current: Paediatrician, Long COVID Specialist, Clinic Nineteen
- 2023–current: Senior Research Fellow, Women’s, Children’s and Adolescents’ Health, Burnet Institute
- 2017–2023: Senior Research Officer, Burnet Institute
- 2014–2016: Research Program Manager, Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies project, Burnet Institute, Kokopo, PNG
- 2013: Clinical Fellow, Centre for International Child Health (CICH), University of Melbourne, Lao PDR
- 2013: Early Essential Newborn Care (EENC) Steering Committee, Lao PDR Ministry of Health and World Health Organization
- 2013: Senior Paediatric Registrar, Townsville, Queensland
- 2010: Maternal and Child Health Project, Ilahita Melbourne Community Association (IMCA), East Sepik, Papua New Guinea
- 2009–2012: Paediatric Registrar, Royal Children's Hospital and Sunshine Hospital, Melbourne
- 2007–2008: Intern and Residents, Western Health, Melbourne
- 2006: Nonga Base Hospital, Rabaul, Papua New Guinea
- 2006: Aboriginal Health Clinic, Amoonguna, Northern Territory
Burnet publications
View 20 more
Beyond time as the healer: action in long COVID treatment to improve patient outcomes
Internal Medicine Journal
Julie Metcalfe et al
Factors Associated with Timely First-Dose Pentavalent and Measles–Rubella Vaccination: A Cross-Sectional Study in East New Britain, Papua New Guinea
Vaccines
Milena Dalton et al
Towards a cure for long COVID : the strengthening case for persistently replicating SARS ‐CoV ‐2 as a driver of post‐acute sequelae of COVID ‐19
The Medical Journal of Australia
Michelle J. L. Scoullar et al
Current projects
View 1 moreTesting treatments for long COVID, a collaborative clinical trial
HEAL APT: Harnessing effective approaches for long COVID therapies through an adaptive platform trial.
Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies (HMHB)
A collaborative research program aimed at providing life-saving health care for women and children in Papua New Guinea.

HMHB: The impact of nutrition and infections on health for pregnant women and young children
In resource-poor regions, pregnant women experience high malaria rates, undernutrition and sexually transmitted infections. These can lead to maternal morbidity, mortality and in infants low birth weight and stunting.
Past projects
Accelerating access to postnatal care and chlorhexidine in PNG
More than 2.7 million babies die within the first 28 days of life worldwide, and we're working to reduce these deaths through postnatal care.
Evaluating a highly sensitive rapid malaria diagnostic in PNG
This project compares the performance of novel high sensitivity Plasmodium falciparum rapid diagnostic tests with conventional tests.