Pioneers in mental health, climate and ageing lead UNSW recipients of Australia Day honours
Current leaders of discovery and distinguished past figures at UNSW Sydney have been awarded Australia Day honours.
Current leaders of discovery and distinguished past figures at UNSW Sydney have been awarded Australia Day honours.
Academics from Science and Medicine lead the list of UNSW Sydney alumni and staff recognised in this year’s Australia Day Honours.
Scientia Professor Helen Christensen FASSA FAHMS, the Executive Director at the Black Dog Institute and a Professor of Mental Health at UNSW, has been appointed as an Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) for “distinguished service to medical research through the development of online mental health treatment programs”. Professor Christensen is an international expert on the prevention of depression and suicide, spearheading the use of digital, smartphone and online technology in the prevention of mental illness. Her ground-breaking work in Australia in the early 2000s generated vast international research efforts incorporating academia, business, clinic and community, culminating in the global expansion of mental health services and interventions.
Professor Andrew Pitman, director at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate Extremes, has been made an Officer of the Order of Australia “for distinguished service to science as a leading researcher, particularly of climate systems and the environment”. The award recognises his visionary leadership and significant contribution to climate research in Australia and internationally. For the past 15 years, Professor Pitman has worked to transform the way climate science works – from competitive silos to a collaborative science community focused on national and global outcomes. Professor Pitman is an internationally recognized expert on terrestrial processes in global and regional climate modelling, model evaluation and earth systems approaches to understanding climate change. As a lead author for Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Assessment Reports 3 and 4, he was recognised for his contribution by the award of a Nobel Peace Prize to the IPCC in 2007. Professor Pitman’s current research at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate Extremes focuses on the processes that trigger extreme weather events and building this understanding into climate modelling systems.
Professor Peter Schofield FAHMS, the CEO of Neuroscience Research Australia (NeuRA) and Professor of Medicine at UNSW, has been recognised as an Officer of the Order of Australia “for distinguished service to medical and scientific research in the field of neuroscience, and to professional institutions”. Professor Schofield has dedicated his life to research and discovery in the field of neuroscience, with a focus on ageing and neurodegeneration, specifically dementia and mental illness, specifically bipolar disorder. Professor Schofield has inspired and challenged researchers to break new ground to find cures for brain disorders in Australia and globally. He has worked in the biotechnology industry and in academic medical research institutes in the US, Germany and Australia. He started his current role as CEO at NeuRA in 2004. In 2015, Professor Schofield was appointed as a foundation member of the NHMRC National Institute for Dementia Research (NNIDR) Expert Advisory Panel, having played an important role in advocacy on the Boosting Dementia Research Initiative to the then federal minister for health.
Other UNSW community members recognised in this year’s honours include:
UNSW congratulates all the members of its community who received 2019 Australia Day Honours.
The full lists of recipients are available at the website of the Governor-General.