AusBiotech has extended the abstract deadline for the April edition of the Australasian Biotechnology Journal.
The call for abstracts has been extended to 21 February. All abstracts should be 200 words and submitted to AusBiotech's communications team.
The organisation said it seeks abstracts from its members on advancing Australian medtech, focusing on themes such as local manufacturing capabilities in next-generation technologies, driving sustainability in medical technology, and harnessing artificial intelligence as an enabler for medtech innovation. It is also looking for articles that offer new approaches, insights, or analyses in these areas.
The journal will also preview AusMedtech 2025, Australia’s premier medtech conference. This flagship event will bring together local and global thought leaders to explore the latest breakthroughs, trends, and critical emerging topics across medical devices, diagnostics, and digital health, showcasing Australia’s contributions to the global stage.
Australasian Biotechnology is AusBiotech’s official biannual journal, published in September and April. Written by the sector, for the sector, highlighting topics such as technology development, manufacturing excellence, sustainability, and strategies to strengthen Australia’s end-to-end life sciences value chain.
Renowned for its informed and authoritative editorials, the journal is a highly effective platform to reach stakeholders across the life sciences sector. It is mailed on a name-and-title basis to more than 3,000 AusBiotech members and investors and is also available digitally.
The readership spans companies, government bodies, universities, research institutes, biotechnology organisations, and professional service providers in Australia and key international markets.
As a benefit exclusive to AusBiotech members, contributions are welcome year-round on research, business news, and sector trends; however, space in each edition is limited and inclusion is not guaranteed.
If your abstract is accepted, the full article will be required by 7 March 2025. Articles can be approximately 500 words (1 page) or 1,000 words (2 pages). High-resolution photos to accompany articles are encouraged.