Steve Campbell

Professor of Clinical Redesign - Nursing
Department of health
University of Tasmania
Australia

Professor Nursing
Biography

Steve undertook his undergraduate education at the Department of Nursing at the University of Manchester in the 1970s, worked as a Health Visitor and then undertook specialist training in children's nursing.  During the 1990s, he was chair of the Association of British Paediatric Nurses, and was founding editor of Child Health journal (now with Sage). He gained his PhD on the topic of mouth care for sick children from Northumbria University. He was made the founding Chair of Nursing Practice at this institution in 2000, leading the Nursing Practice Research Centre at City Hospitals Sunderland, UK. This is where he developed his international reputation for translational research. He has published widely and is currently editor in chief of two journals. He became Head of the School of Health at the University of New England, NSW, in 2009, where he reinvigorated the teaching and research capacity. He moved to the University of Tasmania in January 2013, to become Head of Nursing and Midwifery, and now Head of the School of Health Sciences. He is an executive member of the Council of Deans of Nursing and Midwifery (Australia and Nz), and a member of the Council of Deans of Health Science.

Research Intrest

Nursing Practice, Children's Nursing, Paediatrics, Statistics.

List of Publications
Cader R, Campbell S, Watson D. Cognitive Continuum Theory in nursing decision‐making. Journal of Advanced Nursing. 2005 Feb 1;49(4):397-405.
Honarvar L, Campbell S, Showalter T, inventors; American Management Systems, Inc., assignee. Use of online analytical processing (OLAP) in a rules based decision management system. United States patent US 6,430,545. 2002 Aug 6.
Perez-Ordonez B, Hamed G, Campbell S, Erlandson RA, Russo P, Gaudin PB, Reuter VE. Renal oncocytoma: a clinicopathologic study of 70 cases. The American journal of surgical pathology. 1997 Aug 1;21(8):871-83.
Thomson AJ, Telfer JF, Young A, Campbell S, Stewart CJ, Cameron IT, Greer IA, Norman JE. Leukocytes infiltrate the myometrium during human parturition: further evidence that labour is an inflammatory process. Human Reproduction. 1999 Jan 1;14(1):229-36.