 Good evening, everyone. I'm just accepting the award on behalf of my colleague, Dr. Emma Foster. She is unable to attend due to family commitment back in Melbourne. The project she's doing is focused on improving the way that hospitals manage first seizures. First seizures affect 14,000 Australians each year and they affect almost 10% of people over their lifetime. They inflict substantial costs to people, the caregivers and society because they can result in injuries, hospitalisation and even death. Clearly, managing first seizure well is important for both the healthcare system and our community. Unfortunately, our pilot study found that the management of first seizures can deviate substantially from recommended practice to the extent to which this affect people with first seizure is unknown. The upcoming study will use state-of-the-art data linkage to state and the national data sets to determine outcomes for first seizure patients. Existing research shows that early involvement of epilepsy specialists improve diagnostic accuracy and delay seizure recurrence. As such, this study will also look at whether people who attend first seizure clinic where they can access epilepsy specialists, whether this significantly defer health outcomes compared to people who don't attend first seizure clinic. This research will provide an evidence base to support first seizure clinic in hospital, both nationally and internationally. Lastly, the team will also develop a multi-modality tool using real-world data to predict patient outcomes. The two will look at variables such as age, sex and brain imaging studies. They will see if these variables can predict the chance of seizure recurrence. The two will help identify people of low risk and to high risk for seizure recurrence and guide future investigation intervention. At last, I would like to thank the Brain Foundation Committee and also all the colleagues and supervisors for advice, time, encouragement and support.