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We accept all test referrals. Find a Collection Centre

Pathology services for the future

Pathology services for the future

NSW Health Pathology is currently developing our next strategic plan, which will guide how we design and deliver our services to the people of NSW over the next five to ten years.

We want to bet­ter under­stand what peo­ple across NSW want, need and expect from us.

Your expe­ri­ence and input will help us to pro­vide the best pos­si­ble pathol­o­gy ser­vices, now and into the future.

How can you have your say

There are two main ways for you to be involved and to have your say:

  1. Com­plete our patient, car­er and fam­i­ly expe­ri­ence survey
  2. Reg­is­ter to take part in an online focus group

We are also flex­i­ble about how and where you’d like to pro­vide your feed­back. To share your lived or liv­ing expe­ri­ence, we know that long form writ­ing, pho­tos, poet­ry, and col­lage can be powerful.

Please feel free to send through your feed­back in a way that is best for you by email to [email protected].

Collaborating to combat Antimicrobial Resistance

Our microbiology experts recently travelled to Austria for a World Health Organization meeting to showcase the latest efforts to combat global antimicrobial resistance.

Antimi­cro­bial resis­tance (AMR) is a major threat to mod­ern med­i­cine and glob­al health secu­ri­ty. The main cause of antibi­ot­ic resis­tance is antibi­ot­ic use. When we use antibi­otics, some bac­te­ria die but resis­tant bac­te­ria can sur­vive and even mul­ti­ply. The overuse of antibi­otics makes resis­tant bac­te­ria more common.

The World Health Orga­ni­za­tion (WHO) is work­ing on glob­al actions to address AMR across human, ani­mal, agri­cul­ture and the envi­ron­men­tal sectors.

The WHO AMR Sur­veil­lance and Qual­i­ty Assess­ment Col­lab­o­rat­ing Cen­tres Net­work (WHO AMR CC Net­work) is a glob­al part­ner­ship of insti­tu­tions brought togeth­er by the WHO to sup­port coun­tries to strength­en their response to AMR.

The Network’s mis­sion is to assist the WHO to sup­port coun­tries to build capac­i­ty to devel­op and imple­ment AMR sur­veil­lance. NSW Health Pathology’s Rand­wick lab­o­ra­to­ry plays a cen­tral role in this effort.

The NSWHP Rand­wick WHO Col­lab­o­rat­ing Cen­tre, led by Pro­fes­sor Mon­i­ca Lahra, is serv­ing as the coor­di­nat­ing Col­lab­o­rat­ing Cen­tre for the WHO of the AMR CC Net­work for 2024–2026.g

Pro­fes­sor Mon­i­ca Lahra (Micro­bi­ol­o­gist and WHO CC Direc­tor), Pro­fes­sor Sebas­ti­aan van Hal (Micro­bi­ol­o­gist and Direc­tor NSWHP RPA Genomics), Dr Rob George (Micro­bi­ol­o­gist and Direc­tor of Med­ical Ser­vices) and Ms Savan­nah Gill (Pro­gramme Man­ag­er, WHO CC) from NSW Health Pathol­o­gy WHO Col­lab­o­rat­ing Cen­tre trav­elled to Vien­na, Aus­tria in April 2025.

They attend­ed the 5th WHO CC AMR Net­work Meet­ing and WHO activ­i­ties at the 2025 Euro­pean Soci­ety of Clin­i­cal Micro­bi­ol­o­gy and Infec­tious Dis­eases (ESCMID) Glob­al Congress.

The WHO host­ed a ded­i­cat­ed booth co-host­ed by NSW Health Pathol­o­gy and Robert Koch Insti­tute, Ger­many to raise aware­ness of the Net­work and its work.

A man and a woman standing at a World Health Organization booth at a conference
Dr Savan­nah Gill (NSWHP) and Andrey Verich (PhD stu­dent UNSW) at the WHO booth ESCMID Austria.

Hun­dreds of del­e­gates par­tic­i­pat­ed in dis­cus­sions at the WHO AMR Net­work booth, with infor­ma­tion about the Net­work and a diverse selec­tion of WHO and AMR CC Net­work mate­ri­als show­cased, gen­er­at­ing sus­tained inter­est through­out the event.

The 5th WHO AMR CC Net­work Annu­al Meet­ing was co-host­ed by the WHO Gene­va, NSWHP WHO CC and the Robert Koch Insti­tute Ger­many. This meet­ing brought togeth­er par­tic­i­pants from 36 key insti­tu­tions across the globe to review progress, align pri­or­i­ties, and strength­en col­lab­o­ra­tion across the network.

The meet­ing fea­tured pre­sen­ta­tions from WHO Head­quar­ters high­light­ing WHO’s cur­rent strate­gic and oper­a­tional pri­or­i­ties, AMR Sur­veil­lance and Lab­o­ra­to­ry capac­i­ty, antimi­cro­bial use sur­veil­lance and antimi­cro­bial stewardship.

Pro­fes­sor Lahra gave a pre­sen­ta­tion on the recent work of the NSW Health Pathol­o­gy WHO Col­lab­o­rat­ing Cen­tre AUS-72, high­light­ing net­work activ­i­ties and exper­tise align­ing with strate­gic goals for the Network.

“We are proud to be lead­ing this sur­veil­lance work here in Aus­tralia and ensur­ing that we are coor­di­nat­ing our glob­al response to this major health threat,” Prof Lahra said.

NSW Health Pathology’s lead­er­ship in the WHO AMR Sur­veil­lance CC Net­work meet­ing rein­forces its vital role in the inter­na­tion­al response to AMR and its ongo­ing col­lab­o­ra­tion with WHO in chal­leng­ing times.

(Top pho­to: Prof Sebas­ti­aan van Hal, Prof Mon­i­ca Lahra, Dr Insik Kong (WHO Gene­va), Dr Rob George, Dr Savan­nah Gill)

What can you do to help?

The more we use antibi­otics, the more chance of antimi­cro­bial resis­tance. But there are things we can all do every day to help reduce antibi­ot­ic resistance.*

1. Pre­vent infec­tions by reg­u­lar­ly wash­ing your hands and keep­ing up to date with vaccinations

2. Pre­vent food-borne infec­tions by wash­ing fruits and veg­eta­bles and cook­ing food properly

3. Under­stand that antibi­otics only work against bac­te­ria. They do not work for colds and flus which are caused by viruses

4. Only take antibi­otics when they are pre­scribed for you, don’t use or share left­over antibiotics

5. Fol­low your health professional’s instruc­tions when you are pre­scribed antibiotics

*Source: https://www.amr.gov.au/what-you-can-do

Vale Professor Creswell John Eastman AO

Professor Cres Eastman AO, a pioneering Australian endocrinologist and globally recognised public health advocate, has died at the age of 85, leaving behind a lasting legacy of leadership at NSW Health Pathology.

Born on 30 March 1940 in Nar­ran­dera NSW, Pro­fes­sor East­man devot­ed his life to the erad­i­ca­tion of iodine defi­cien­cy dis­or­ders (IDD), pro­found­ly trans­form­ing glob­al health out­comes and earn­ing the fit­ting title “the man who saved a mil­lion brains.”

A dis­tin­guished grad­u­ate of the Uni­ver­si­ty of Syd­ney, where he earned his MBBS in 1965 and MD in 1980, Pro­fes­sor East­man com­menced his med­ical career that same year. He was admit­ted as a Fel­low of the Roy­al Aus­tralasian Col­lege of Physi­cians in 1974 and held numer­ous influ­en­tial aca­d­e­m­ic and clin­i­cal posi­tions through­out his career.

Notably, he served as Direc­tor of the Insti­tute of Clin­i­cal Pathol­o­gy and Med­ical Research (ICPMR) at West­mead Hos­pi­tal from 1989 to 2006.

Fol­low­ing this, he con­tin­ued his vital work as Clin­i­cal Pro­fes­sor of Med­i­cine at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Syd­ney and as Con­sul­tant Emer­i­tus at West­mead Hos­pi­tal until his passing.

In the 1980s, Pro­fes­sor East­man iden­ti­fied wide­spread iodine defi­cien­cy in Chi­na and Tibet, where the dis­or­der caused severe devel­op­men­tal impair­ments in chil­dren. His tire­less advo­ca­cy and ground­break­ing research were instru­men­tal in the imple­men­ta­tion of nation­al iodiza­tion pro­grams, which dra­mat­i­cal­ly reduced the inci­dence of cre­tinism and goitre in these regions.

His efforts extend­ed to South­east Asia, the Pacif­ic Islands, and Indige­nous Aus­tralian com­mu­ni­ties, where he empha­sised the crit­i­cal impor­tance of iodine in pre­na­tal and ear­ly child­hood health.

In 1997, he was appoint­ed Direc­tor and Chief Gov­ern­ment Ana­lyst of the Divi­sion of Ana­lyt­i­cal Lab­o­ra­to­ries (DAL) in Lid­combe. Under his lead­er­ship, the DAL pro­vid­ed crit­i­cal pub­lic health ana­lyt­i­cal and foren­sic med­ical ser­vices to the entire state of NSW.

Through­out his dis­tin­guished career, Pro­fes­sor East­man received numer­ous hon­ours, includ­ing the Offi­cer of the Order of Aus­tralia in 2018 for dis­tin­guished ser­vice to med­i­cine, par­tic­u­lar­ly to the dis­ci­pline of pathology.

He received the Premier’s Gold Ser­vice Award in 2002 and was a final­ist for Senior Aus­tralian of the Year in 2003. His most recent award was the 2023 Iodine Glob­al Net­work (IGN) Dr Basil Het­zel Award, in recog­ni­tion of his advo­ca­cy in cur­rent iodine nutri­tion in Aus­tralia where­by manda­to­ry iodized salt in bread ensures ade­quate intake for the gen­er­al pop­u­la­tion while sup­ple­men­ta­tion is rec­om­mend­ed for preg­nant women due to increased requirements.

Pro­fes­sor East­man’s endur­ing lega­cy lives on in the mil­lions of chil­dren world­wide who have been spared the dev­as­tat­ing effects of iodine defi­cien­cy due to his work.

His ded­i­ca­tion to pub­lic health and med­ical research has been firm­ly embed­ded with­in the Insti­tute for Clin­i­cal Pathol­o­gy and Med­ical Research—an insti­tu­tion he led for 17 years. Today, NSW Health Pathol­o­gy con­tin­ues to uphold the prin­ci­ples and com­mit­ments that Pro­fes­sor East­man cham­pi­oned, serv­ing com­mu­ni­ties across the state.

Pro­fes­sor East­man died on Sat­ur­day 17 May 2025 peace­ful­ly at home. He is sur­vived by his fam­i­ly and a gen­er­a­tion of col­leagues who car­ry for­ward his unwa­ver­ing com­mit­ment to glob­al health. His pro­found con­tri­bu­tions to endocrinol­o­gy and pub­lic health have left an indeli­ble mark on med­i­cine and human­i­ty, inspir­ing ongo­ing efforts to improve lives worldwide.

Haematologist recognised as a Highly Ranked Scholar for “exceptional scholarly performance”

NSW Health Pathology Senior Staff Specialist in Haematology Professor Beng Chong has been named a highly ranked scholar for 2024 by ScholarGPS for the outstanding quality of his research work into blood clots and bleeding disorders.

As a 2024 High­ly Ranked Schol­ar, Prof Chong has ranked in the top 0.05% of all schol­ars world­wide in recog­ni­tion of his “excep­tion­al schol­ar­ly per­for­mance, the high impact of his work, and the out­stand­ing qual­i­ty of his schol­ar­ly contributions.”

Prof Chong was also ranked in the top 0.19% of all schol­ars glob­al­ly in Med­i­cine, 0.25% in Pathol­o­gy and in Throm­bo­sis 0.1%.

He has pub­lished 255 research papers since 1982.

He is involved in clin­i­cal work as NSW Health Pathology’s Senior Staff Spe­cial­ist in Haema­tol­ogy at St George and Suther­land Hos­pi­tals but main­tains a strong focus on research.

“My research ranges from basic sci­ence research to clin­i­cal trials/registry stud­ies and trans­la­tion research,” Prof Chong explains.

“My basic sci­ence stud­ies focus on mech­a­nisms of throm­bot­ic and bleeding/thrombocytopenia dis­or­ders, as well as mech­a­nisms of throm­bo­sis in car­dio­vas­cu­lar (heart) dis­ease and stroke.

“I’ve been involved in exten­sive clin­i­cal tri­als of anti­co­ag­u­lants, which are now wide­ly used for the pre­ven­tion and treat­ment of throm­bot­ic (blood clot) disorders.

“My cur­rent focus in mech­a­nisms of throm­bo­sis is inves­ti­ga­tion of the role of white cells, par­tic­u­lar­ly neu­trophils, and red cells besides the tra­di­tion­al roles of platelets and blood coag­u­la­tion in the for­ma­tion of blood clots.”

Dr Bente Talseth-Palmer, NSWHP Research Oper­a­tions Man­ag­er, says the organ­i­sa­tion places a high pri­or­i­ty on sup­port­ing its researchers.

“NSW Health Pathol­o­gy aims to build a bet­ter health and jus­tice sys­tem by lead­ing vital research that dri­ves inno­va­tion,” she said.

“It’s inspir­ing to see researchers like Prof Chong being recog­nised for their work—because it’s this kind of research that leads to faster, more accu­rate care for peo­ple affect­ed by blood clots and bleed­ing disorders.”

 

Forensic DNA experts put hundreds of ‘cold-case’ sexual assaults back under the spotlight

A special team has been working at NSW Health Pathology’s Forensic Biology/DNA lab to test hundreds of historic Sexual Assault Investigation Kits (SAIKs) using the latest technology and search for DNA matches on the state and national DNA databases.

In a lab­o­ra­to­ry at the Foren­sic & Ana­lyt­i­cal Sci­ence Ser­vice (FASS) build­ing in Lid­combe a team of 12 Foren­sic Sci­en­tists has spent two years work­ing on the SAIK Back­cap­ture Project.

A part­ner­ship with NSW Police, the team has painstak­ing­ly reassessed and exam­ined hun­dreds of stored Sex­u­al Assault Inves­ti­ga­tion Kits (SAIKs) for DNA using the lat­est tech­nolo­gies now available.

SAIKs are pro­vid­ed at the hos­pi­tal after a sex­u­al assault com­plaint is made and are used by med­ical and foren­sic exam­in­ers to col­lect evidence.

The pur­pose of the project was to bol­ster the exist­ing crim­i­nal DNA data­base, iden­ti­fy links between scenes and offend­ers, and to ulti­mate­ly gath­er intel­li­gence and fur­ther inves­tiga­tive leads.

Team Leader of the SAIK Back­cap­ture Project at FASS, Kylie Deece, (pic­tured above front row, sec­ond from left) says the SAIKs typ­i­cal­ly con­tain inti­mate swabs and items of cloth­ing such as underwear.

A woman in a laboratory, wearing full PPE, examines a pair of underpants.
The team has exam­ined hun­dreds of Sex­u­al Assault Inves­ti­ga­tion Kits or SAIKs as part of the project, in col­lab­o­ra­tion with NSW Police.

“With assis­tance from NSW Police, our team received more than 780 SAIKs from police sta­tions across NSW and some dat­ing back as far as 23 years.”

Ms Deece says despite the age of some of the kits, state-of-the-art DNA test­ing meth­ods avail­able at NSW Health Pathology’s Foren­sic Biology/DNA lab­o­ra­to­ries means they have been able to suc­cess­ful­ly extract DNA from the SAIKs and upload the infor­ma­tion to the NSW and Nation­al Crim­i­nal DNA databases.

“It’s been quite a suc­cess­ful project. We’ve had 310 uploads to the data­base from sam­ples that would have oth­er­wise remained in stor­age. Once pro­files are uploaded to the data­base, it can pro­vide intel­li­gence for Police includ­ing poten­tial­ly iden­ti­fy­ing ser­i­al sex­u­al offend­ers,” she explained.

Some of the fund­ing was also used to exam­ine pre­vi­ous­ly test­ed sex­u­al assault sam­ples after the orig­i­nal test­ing could not recov­er a DNA pro­file suit­able for upload to the database.

“The tech­nol­o­gy for DNA test­ing has moved on sig­nif­i­cant­ly since some of those tests were done,” she said.

“Test­ing now is much more sen­si­tive and we’re also able to tar­get DNA from the male Y chro­mo­some, which can help to iden­ti­fy offend­ers through a famil­ial match.”

A woman works in a laboratory under a purple 'black-light'.
Ultra­vi­o­let light is used to exam­ine evi­dence from the kits.

Ms Deece said the sup­port of both the wider Foren­sic Biology/DNA and Receipt Unit sec­tions of FASS has been cru­cial to the project’s suc­cess – pro­vid­ing exper­tise and train­ing while con­tin­u­ing with already sub­stan­tial workloads.

She also thanked the orig­i­nal Team Leader, Diana De Losa, who set sol­id foun­da­tions to ensure the best pos­si­ble out­comes for the project.

NSW Police say the work sends a clear mes­sage to offend­ers that police nev­er stop inves­ti­gat­ing inci­dents of sex­u­al assault and abuse and it’s nev­er too late to report an inci­dent of sex­u­al assault.

We’re here for the Lithgow region, 365 days a year!

Take a look behind the scenes at our pathology laboratory at Lithgow Hospital and meet some of the team caring for the local community.

Matthew O’Neal has been NSW Health Pathology’s lab­o­ra­to­ry man­ag­er at Lith­gow since 2007.

Dur­ing his 39-year career in pathol­o­gy Matthew has worked in both the pri­vate and pub­lic sec­tor, start­ing in Syd­ney and mov­ing to Bathurst in the NSW Cen­tral West, before set­tling in Lithgow.

He says the small team is like a fam­i­ly and proud to be pro­vid­ing pathol­o­gy ser­vices sev­en days a week to the Lith­gow and sur­round­ing community.

“Lith­gow is a real­ly great place to work and as lab man­ag­er I try to ensure the work­place is reward­ing for our team,” he said.

“We’ve got a heavy focus on out­pa­tients here, eas­i­ly a third of our work is relat­ed to outpatients.

A man in an office smiling.
Matthew O’Neal says he’s proud of the ser­vices pro­vid­ed by the Lith­gow lab­o­ra­to­ry and its ded­i­cat­ed staff.

The Lith­gow lab­o­ra­to­ry boasts the lat­est tech­nol­o­gy, with a new chem­i­cal pathol­o­gy analyser installed in July 2023 as part of NSW Health Pathology’s $29 mil­lion invest­ment to upgrade analy­sers across Syd­ney and region­al NSW, bring­ing in new lev­els of automa­tion and standardisation.

The lab per­forms approx­i­mate­ly 96,000 tests each year on around 20,000 sam­ples with turn-around for most tests less than one hour.

The Lith­gow lab­o­ra­to­ry per­forms all rou­tine test­ing for Lith­gow Hos­pi­tal and local Jus­tice Health; we recent­ly added to our test­ing menu for the hospital’s Ambu­la­to­ry Care Clin­ic to improve the ser­vice. Our twice-dai­ly links with Nepean and West­mead Hos­pi­tals as well as the entire state-wide net­work sup­ple­ment our test menu.

Matthew says he’s espe­cial­ly proud that the Lith­gow lab and col­lec­tion ser­vice is open sev­en days a week.

“I know the impor­tance of hav­ing pathol­o­gy ser­vices in the local com­mu­ni­ty,” he said.

“My sis­ter was diag­nosed with a brain tumour in 2014. It made me realise how dif­fi­cult it can be for peo­ple to get to a col­lec­tion ser­vice when it’s only open in busi­ness hours.

“Our col­lec­tion ser­vice is open at Lith­gow Hos­pi­tal sev­en days a week, 7½ hours a day on week­days from 8:30am to 4pm, and on week­ends 10.30am to 1pm.

“We also have a col­lec­tion ser­vice at Port­land MPS, with more lim­it­ed open­ing hours of 8.30am to 11.30am week­days, so we are serv­ing our com­mu­ni­ty as much as possible.

“The lab­o­ra­to­ry is acces­si­ble to the hos­pi­tal every day of the year – even Christ­mas Day – to pro­vide fast and accu­rate results for patients and clin­i­cians across the region,” Matthew said.

“We are on-call for the hos­pi­tal Emer­gency Depart­ment and sur­gi­cal the­atres for any cas­es deemed clin­i­cal­ly urgent 24 hours a day, sev­en days a week.”

Meet Cassandra Quinn – Technical Assistant (pathology collector)

Cas­san­dra Quinn began work at the Lith­gow lab­o­ra­to­ry in 2024 and says she enjoys the prac­ti­cal nature of being a collector.

She says col­lec­tions allows her to engage direct­ly with patients as well as per­form tech­ni­cal tasks in the lab.

“I enjoy help­ing oth­ers and through pathol­o­gy col­lec­tion I can con­tribute to patient care, sup­port­ing patients through their health­care jour­ney,” she said.

“But what I enjoy the most is per­form­ing tech­ni­cal tasks such as draw­ing blood sam­ples and processing.”

A woman wearing a healthworker uniform, smiling while standing in a collections space.

Cas­san­dra Quinn in the col­lec­tions room at Lithgow.

Cas­san­dra says the team at Lith­gow is incred­i­bly sup­port­ive and work­ing with a small­er team gives her the oppor­tu­ni­ty to learn from her more expe­ri­enced colleagues.

“I’ve also recent­ly been giv­en an amaz­ing oppor­tu­ni­ty to expand my knowl­edge and fur­ther my career by com­menc­ing my Cer­tifi­cate 4 in Lab­o­ra­to­ry Tech­niques through NSW Health Pathology.”

When it comes to liv­ing in Lith­gow, Cas­san­dra says she loves the stun­ning land­scape and the sense of com­mu­ni­ty in the town.

“I am a body­builder, cross-fit­ter and aer­i­al ath­lete. I do all of these things local­ly which has allowed me to make an amaz­ing social net­work here in Lithgow.

“With my new­found fit friends I go on some of the amaz­ing trail runs in my sur­round­ing area and join in a local bush walk every first Sun­day of the month.”

A female bodybuilder wearing a blue sash and holding a sword aloft.
Cas­san­dra at a body­build­ing competition.

Meet Hospital Scientist, Ryan Benton

Ryan is a Hos­pi­tal Sci­en­tist at Lith­gow lab­o­ra­to­ry and his work involves analysing sam­ples, mon­i­tor­ing qual­i­ty con­trol and trans­fu­sion medicine.

His career with NSW Health Pathol­o­gy began in 2018 when he start­ed as a Tech­ni­cal Assis­tant at the Orange Laboratory.

“I’ve always had a broad inter­est in sci­ence and the human body, and pathol­o­gy allowed me to be able to apply that in a field that is direct­ly ben­e­fi­cial to the care of peo­ple in my com­mu­ni­ty,” Ryan explains.

A man sitting in a laboratory, smiling.
Hos­pi­tal sci­en­tist, Ryan Benton.

“What I love about my work, espe­cial­ly in a small lab such as Lith­gow, is that it con­tains such variety.

“You fre­quent­ly switch between chem­istry, haema­tol­ogy and trans­fu­sion in a way that keeps the job engaging.

“The role also allows you to be much more patient fac­ing, as we fre­quent­ly col­lect blood from patients in both inpa­tient and out­pa­tient set­tings. I believe this helps to put a face to the work we are doing and acts a pos­i­tive reminder that our patients are more than just tubes and numbers.”

Ryan grew up in a rur­al area of the North­ern Ter­ri­to­ry and says he feels at home liv­ing and work­ing in region­al NSW.

He says he enjoys work­ing with­in a small team envi­ron­ment and col­lab­o­rat­ing with oth­er staff and depart­ments through­out Lith­gow hospital.

“Out­side of work, my spare time is spent with my fam­i­ly and with my church. My wife and I are cur­rent­ly rais­ing our 11-month-old son, who is a lot of work but also a lot of fun and a con­stant source of joy,” Ryan said. “My faith is very impor­tant to me.”

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