Min Jun

About Associate Professor Min Jun

Program Lead

Min Jun is Scientia Associate Professor and Program Lead at the George Institute for Global Health, Faculty of Medicine, UNSW Sydney.

Min leads a program of research focused on understanding the impact of clinical management strategies in people with kidney disease and its related complications. He has developed and leads international projects using large clinical trial and real-world, population based data sources.

Min holds a PhD (2012) and MScMed(ClinEpi) in clinical epidemiology from the University of Sydney, and a MSc(by research) and BSc(Hon) from UNSW Sydney. He was previously an NHMRC Early Career Fellow (2013-2016) based in Canada (University of Calgary), co-funded by two additional competitive federal/provincial Canadian fellowships (CIHR/AIHS). Min's research track record includes >100 publications (including in top-ranked journals e.g. BMJ, Lancet, JACC), >$5.1M in research funding from top-level funding agencies (e.g. NHMRC). To date, 72% of his work is published in top 10% journals worldwide, has been cited >4500 times including in some 24 international clinical practice guidelines across various fields.

Min is actively involved in mentoring, training and supervising research students and fellows. He currently serves as Associate Editor (Global Health) for Kidney and Blood Pressure Research and has been involved in the development of clinical practice guidelines for the care of patients with kidney disease in Australia and internationally.

Safety and Effectiveness of Apixaban versus Warfarin by Kidney Function in Atrial Fibrillation

Kidney360 Date published:

Assessing patterns of chronic kidney disease care in Australian primary care: a retrospective cohort study of a national general practice dataset

The Lancet Regional Health - Western Pacific Date published:

Variability in HbA1c and the risk of major clinical outcomes in type 2 diabetes with chronic kidney disease: Post hoc analysis from the CREDENCE trial

Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism Date published:

Predicting Contrast-Associated Acute Kidney Injury

JAMA Network Open Date published:

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