Past Presidents:
2017 – 2023 Geoff Robinson
You can read more about Geoff in his full bio below.
2009 – 2017 Greg Mahoney
2000 – 2009 Russell Schedlich
1995 – 2000 Nader Abou-Seif
1991-1995 James Ross
Past Council Members
2016 – 2022 Rachelle Bonner
2007 – 2018 Greg Mahoney
2013 – 2015 Jenny Lumsden
2012 – 2012 Ross Mills & Stewart Robertson
Ross is a lateral entry to the RAN, having started his Aviation Medicine career with the RNZAF before spending a period in Australian Army Reserve and working in private practice. His postings include to Navy Safety, JHC, J07 MER, DFMO, and on HMAS Canberra. He is currently posted as SO1 AVMED at the Naval Air Station (HMAS Albatross) in the role of Single Service Aviation Medicine Advisor – Navy. Ross holds current fellowships in General Practice, Occupational and Environmental Medicine and Australasian College of Aerospace Medicine with additional qualifications in Health Informatics and Safety.
2011 – 2024 Dr Peter Hurly
2010 – 2011 Neil Westphalen
2010 – 2010 Stephanie Hodson
2008 – 2011; 2013 – 2015 Kerry Clifford
2005-2009 Treasurer; 2011 – 2011 Scott Kitchener
2005 – 2007 James Ross
2000 – 2007 Graham Boothby
* Medical Officer RAAF Williamtown
* Senior Medical Officer RAAF Williamtown
* USAF Flight Surgeon Primary Course
* Chief Instructor RAAF Institute of Aviation Medicine
1999 – 2006 Beverley Wright
1999 – 2004 Dave Emonson
1998 – 2024 Geoff Robinson
1998 – 2005 Fabian Purcell
1996 – 1998 Bob Stacy
1996 – 1997 Marcus Skinner
Marcus did his basic medical training in Hobart sponsored by the Royal Australian Air Force through the medical Undergradute programme. Following his return of service obligations with the RAAF as a medical officer he undertake specialist anaesthesia training. It was during his time in the military that he became a Trauma instructor with the EMST programme and realised the need for trauma training in developing countries. In 1995 he was asked by Dr Haydn Perndt to run a pilot trauma training course with Dr Douglas Wilkinson from Oxford in the UK to undertake a programme in Fiji. He was the co-author of the PTC manual with Douglas and they both ran the very first PTC course in Suva, Fiji in 1997.
1996 – 1996 Lydia Stevens
Flight Lieutenant Ludmila (Lydia) Stevens (nee Marik) was one of four ADF nursing officers and the only RAAF member in a 10-strong Australian team sent to staff a Red Cross surgical facility in one of the refugee camps along the Thai-Cambodia border for three months. The Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia which ended the infamous rule of the Khmer Rouge in 1979 had produced a huge influx of refugees fleeing the fighting. After the Humanitarian Overseas Service Medal was instituted in 1999, Lydia Stevens became the first ADF member awarded it.
1995-2000 Russell Schedlich
1991 Mark Slatyer
1991-1996 Chris Maron
Chris was one of three councillors who had been members since AMMA was founded, holding the positions of inaugural Treasurer and later Member. He was posted to the UK in 1996 and left the AMMA Council with our gratitude for all his efforts in the establishment of the Association.
1991 Peter Warfe
Born in Dromana in 1951, his family moved to Melbourne where Peter went to school. After gaining entry to Monash University to study medicine, he took an army scholarship and went to the army full-time in 1976. After posting to several locations including PNG, Wagga, Germany, Canberra and then later the USA, Peter settled in Sydney at the Land Headquarters. In 1990 Peter was promoted to Colonel and appointed the commander of the Australian contingent to Rwanda, the then the UN Peacekeeping Force in Rwanda in 1995. Peter retired from the army in 1999, and works in private public health as a physician.
Past Patrons:
2022 – 2024 Rear Admiral Sarah Sharkey RAN AM, CSC
Rear Admiral Sarah Edith Sharkey, AM, CSC is an Australian physician, medical administrator, and a senior officer in the Royal Australian Navy.
While holding the rank of captain, Sharkey was awarded a Conspicuous Service Cross in the 2014 Queen’s Birthday Honours for “outstanding achievement as the Director of Clinical Governance and Projects and Australian Defence Force Health Services Project Transition Lead”. She was appointed as a Member of the Order of Australia in the 2020 Queen’s Birthday Honours “for exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force in the management of health care”.
2019 – 2022 Major General Charles New OAM
2015 – 2019 Rear Admiral Jenny Firman AM
2011 – 2015 Air Vice Marshal Professor Hugh Bartholomeusz OAM, RFD, MBBS, FRACS
Dr Hugh Bartholomeusz graduated from the University of Queensland in 1976. He undertook further advanced surgical training in plastic surgery at Princess Alexandra Hospital, Royal Brisbane Hospital and the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Adelaide. He is currently the senior plastic surgeon at Greenslopes Private Hospital and has been President of the Queensland Society of Plastic Surgeons and Chairman of the State Committee of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons. His appointments have also included the Chairmanship of the Australian Day Surgery Council and past President of the Council of the Australian Society of Plastic Surgeons. He teaches undergraduate and post graduate medical and nursing personnel and is currently appointed as an Associate Professor at the University of Queensland.
His international accomplishments have included World President of the International Air Cadet Exchange Association and a member of the Executive Committee of the International Association of Ambulatory Surgery. He has served as a commissioned officer in the Royal Australian Air Force since 1972 and currently holds the rank of Air Vice-Marshal. He is a former Surgeon General Australian Defence Force Reserves and is the current Chairman of the Australian Air Force Cadets National Council.
2008 – 2011 Major General Paul Alexander
MAJGEN Paul Alexander joined the Army in 1976 and completed his medical training at the University of Melbourne in 1978. Following several years of clinical training in Victorian hospitals, he commenced the first of several regimental appointments as the Regimental Medical Officer (RMO) of the 3rd Battalion Royal Australian Regiment. This was followed by several years working as an RMO in Papua New Guinea with the PNG Defence Force. He then served as the RMO for the Special Air Service Regiment for three years and completed SAS selection during his tenure.
MAJGEN Alexander has also been actively involved in risk management and legal medicine. He has completed a Masters in Legal Medicine and is a Fellow of the Australian College of Legal Medicine. MAJGEN Alexander was promoted to the rank of Major General on 25th March 2008.
MAJGEN Alexander was appointed Commander Joint Health and Surgeon General Australian Defence Force on 4 August 2008 and Joint Health Command was established on 11 August 2008.
2005 – 2008 Rear Admiral Graeme Shirtley RFD
Graeme was awarded a Diploma of Diagnostic Radiology from Sydney University in 1979 and his Fellowship from the Royal Australasian College of Radiologists (now the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Radiologists) in 1980. He was in private practice in Sydney, developing his special interests in CT imaging, musculo-skeletal imaging (particularly with ultrasound) and mammography. He was Chairman of his radiology group in 1995-99. In addition, Graeme was a senior visiting medical officer with the Central and Eastern Sydney Breast Screening Program at the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital from 1989 to 2003. He was also chairman of the CT group of the RANZCR Accreditation and Quality Control Subcommittee, and the radiologist on the Professional Services Review Committee of the Health Insurance Commission. In 1992 Graeme became a Visiting Fellow in MRI at the Barrows Neurological Institute in Phoenix Arizona, and at the MRI Institute Presbyterian Hospital in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania. He was also a member of the Radiological Society of North America.
Graeme joined the Royal Australian Naval Reserve (RANR) as a junior sailor in 1969. After topping his recruit course, he joined the medical branch as an Ordinary Sick Berth Attendant. Over the next six years he was promoted through the ranks to Leading Seaman while continuing his undergraduate medical studies.
On 9 May 2005 Graeme was promoted to Rear Admiral and appointed SGADF, the first Navy medical officer to hold the position since its establishment in the early 1980s. He was also the first medical officer to achieve the rank of Rear Admiral RANR, and the first to achieve the rank of Rear Admiral since Geoff Bayliss (DGNHS 1987-1990).
In addition to chairing the Australian Defence Human Research Ethics Committee, Graeme was Adjunct Associate Professor at the University of Queensland in the Centre for Military and Veterans Health (CMVH), and Chairman of the CMVH e-Health Committee. He also continued to conduct courses in ultrasound for trauma surgeons, as part of the Royal Australian College of Surgeons teaching program. On 04 July 2008, with the restructure of the senior ADF health leadership, Graeme was appointed Surgeon General Defence Health Reserves until 31 December 2008. He was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia in the Military Division in the Australia Day 2011 Honours List, for his exceptional performance of duties as a RANR medical officer.
2001 – 2005 Air Vice-Marshal Bruce Short
Following postgraduate training Air Vice-Marshal Short was admitted as a Fellow of the Australasian College of Physicians in 1973 and commenced private practice in Sydney as a specialist general physician with particular interests in cardiovascular medicine. In 1989 he was admitted as a Fellow of the American College of Chest Physicians and in 2000 advanced to Fellowship of the American College of Physicians. Air Vice-Marshal Short holds appointments at Royal North Shore Hospital, Sydney Adventist and North Shore Private hospitals and since 1975 has been a Clinical Lecturer in Cardiology at the University of Sydney
Air Vice-Marshal Short has completed 40 years of continuous service in the Australian Defence Force following his enlistment in 1960 as a private in the Sydney University Regiment. Following 4 years Reserve infantry training he transferred to the RAAF medical undergraduate scheme. He graduated from the University of Sydney and following residency at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, he commenced permanent Air Force service in 1968 at 3 RAAF Hospital. In addition to his clinical duties he performed strategic aeromedical evacuation service to Vung Tau, Vietnam. He was then posted as Senior Medical Officer RAAF Point Cook, and Senior Medical Officer RAAF Williamtown (1970). In 1972 he transferred to the RAAF General Reserve and, in late 1973, served at 4 RAAF, Butterworth, Malaysia, as a specialist physician.
1998 – 2001 Major General John Pearn AM
Major General John Pearn has served as one of Australia’s most senior doctor-soldiers. Professor Pearn is Senior Paediatrician at the Queensland Children’s Hospital where he has served as a full-time staff clinician since 1968. His major clinical, research and teaching interests in paediatrics and internal medicine have included medical genetics, clinical toxicology, bioethics and accident prevention.
Major General John Pearn also served in a second career in the Australian Defence Force, rising progressively through various senior command and executive positions in the Defence Health Service. In 1998 Major General Pearn was appointed Surgeon General to the Australian Defence Force and served in this role until his retirement in 2000.
1996 – 1998 Air Vice Marshal Graeme Moller AM
Following graduation as a doctor in 1968 and residency at the Alfred Hospital Melbourne, Graeme served in the RAAF from 1970. His lengthy service included time as an Exchange Officer with the United States Air Force based at Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada (and living in Las Vegas for two and a half years). He held several other RAAF posts before becoming Director-General of Air Force Health Services, then finally becoming Surgeon General of the Australian Defence Force. He was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia (Military Division) in 1999.
1992 – 1996 Major General David Rossi AO
1991 – 1992 Air Vice Marshal Michael Miller AO
Michael joined the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) in 1968. In 1970, Michael served a year of duty with the RAAF in South Vietnam as Senior Medical Officer, where he undertook surgical duties as well as being responsible for the aeromedical evacuation of wounded Australian Service personnel. Michael obtained his Fellowship of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) in 1980 and Fellowship of the Royal Australian College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RACOG) in 1991. Michael was highly regarded by all members of the Health Services as an exceptional leader. On Australia Day 1989, he was awarded the Order of Australia (AO) in the Military Division for service to the RAAF as Director General of Air Force Health Services. Towards the end of his military and medical career and following his subsequent retirement, Michael was Surgeon General with the Australian Defence Force (Ret.), and was actively involved with a number of other bodies, including St John Ambulance Australia, the National Advisory Committee on Veterans’ Health RSL and the Administration Appeals Tribunal (Federal).