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Ingham Institute For Applied Medical Research

Concentration Risk
FoundationRegistryHPCABN 15958063508NSW
Relationships
40
Data Sources
2
Revenue
$17.3M
Contract Value
$1.5M
Preview
Data as of: 19 June 2026
Found in 4 systemsProcurementJustice FundingACNC CharitiesFoundations

About

The Ingham Institute for Applied Medical Research is a medical research institute established in 2008 to conduct translational research addressing the specific health challenges of South Western Sydney. It focuses on applied research that moves beyond scientific discovery to directly transform health outcomes and healthcare delivery for its local community and broader populations. The institute supports groundbreaking medical research tackling major health issues affecting Australia and the world, with particular emphasis on health equity.

Government Funding (—)

Vitocco Charitable Foundation — Contributions to Ingham Institute for Applied Medical Research
1 record

Top Contracts (top 5)

INV002478 & INV002479
HealthShare NSW · Dec 2023–Oct 2024
$714K
INV002478 & INV002479
HealthShare NSW · Dec 2023–Oct 2024
$714K
SWS51524313
HealthShare NSW · Dec 2024–Mar 2025
$435K
SWS51524313
HealthShare NSW · Dec 2024–Mar 2025
$435K
SWS51582889
HealthShare NSW · Feb 2025–Mar 2025
$309K

Board Interlocks (6 shared directors)

Giving Philosophy

The institute prioritizes applied medical research that solves real problems for real people in real time, with deep commitment to transforming health outcomes in South Western Sydney. It values inclusive, respectful, and impactful research that partners with communities and advances health equity, including meaningful engagement with First Nations peoples and their healing traditions.

Wealth Source:Medical research institute funding model, likely combining government research grants, philanthropic donations, and institutional support; appears to operate as a research organization rather than a traditional grant-making foundation.

Tips for Applicants

Align research proposals with South Western Sydney's specific health challenges and demonstrate clear pathways to applied health outcomes. Emphasize community partnership, health equity focus, and practical implementation of research findings rather than theoretical discovery alone.

Financial History (7 years)

YearRevenueExpensesAssetsSurplus
2023$17.3M$19.1M$82.0M$191K
2022$12.1M$18.6M$80.2M$-6,548,332
2021$10.7M$13.4M$85.8M$1.2M
2020$10.1M$14.2M$83.1M$-3,803,297
2019$10.3M$9.0M$85.1M$1.3M
2018$7.2M$8.3M$81.3M$314K
2017$9.1M$7.8M$80.7M$1.2M
Govt Revenue
$4.3M
Grants Given (AU)
$2.1M
Staff (FTE)
108.7
0
Donations Received
$3.6M

Community Evidence

External Evidence

Identity

GS ID
AU-ABN-15958063508
ABN
15958063508
Sector
health
Financial Year
2023

Focus Areas

Themes
healthresearchcommunity
Geography
AU-NSW
Target Recipients
medical researchersresearch institutionshealth equity initiatives
Purposes
Health
Beneficiaries
First NationsAdultsAgedChildrenEarly ChildhoodEthnic GroupsFamiliesFemalesFinancially DisadvantagedGeneral CommunityMalesMigrants & RefugeesChronic IllnessDisabilityYouth

Board & Leadership (14)

Financials

Revenue
$17.3M
Assets
$82.0M

Method

Match Confidence
registry
Cross-references
2 datasets
Match Key
ABN
Relationships
40

Matched by Australian Business Number (ABN) — high confidence. This entity was found across multiple government datasets using the same ABN.

Data Sources

ACNCFoundations

JusticeHub

External Link

This entity is also tracked in JusticeHub with 0 interventions and 0 evidence records.

External ecosystem profile linked from GrantScope for additional context. JusticeHub content is maintained separately.

View on JusticeHub

Location Intelligence

Postcode
2170
Locality
MOUNT PRITCHARD
Remoteness
Major Cities of Australia
SEIFA Disadvantage
Decile 1/10
LGA
Fairfield
Entities in Area
1,109

This entity is in a postcode ranked in the most disadvantaged 10% nationally (SEIFA Index of Relative Socio-economic Disadvantage, ABS 2021 Census).

View on Power Map

Disability Market Context

NDIS Layer
State Providers
4,591
Thin Districts
2
Very Thin
1
Local Alternatives
0
13 community-controlled orgs in postcode

This organisation shows disability-related delivery signals. The strategic question is whether it sits inside a resilient market, a thin market, or a captured market where large providers take most of the money and local alternatives are scarce.

Thinnest Districts In NSW
Far West49 providers
Far West51 providers
Southern NSW242 providers
Captured Markets
Far West95%
Mid North Coast89%
Western NSW75%
Murrumbidgee71%