The Australasian Professional Society on Alcohol and other Drugs

APSAD Awards Past Recipients

YEAR EARLY CAREER AWARD SENIOR SCIENTIST AWARD FIRST PEOPLES AWARD CLINICIAN AWARD MENTOR
AWARD
MID CAREER AWARD  

 ADVOCACY AWARD

2023

Dr Alison Beck
&
Dr Sara Farnbach

Professor Elizabeth Elliott

Rebecca Hyland
&
Craig Holloway

Dr Nico Clark

Professor Gillian Gould
&
Dr Chris Holmwood

Assoc. Professor Kylie Lee Dr Penny Hill
20222 Dr Benjamin Riordan Professor Wayne Hall Robyn Williams Dr Victoria Cock Dr Kylie Lee Dr Michael Livingston NSW Users and AIDS Association 
2021  Dr Cassandra Wright Prof Leanne Hides Moana Pera Tane  Lynette Bullen Dr Cath Chapman

Prof Nicola Newton

Dr Peter Kelly 

Grace Oh
2020 Dr Cheneal Puljević A/Prof Robert Ali Robert Assan Dr Anthony Gill Prof Paul Dietze A/Prof Suzanne Nielsen  
2019 Dr Catherine Quinn Prof Adrian Dunlop  Dr Michael Doyle  Dr Mark Montebello Prof Kate Conigrave A/Prof Emmanuel Kuntsche  
2018 A/Prof Gillian Gould Prof Nicholas Lintzeris - - Prof Billie Bonevski -  
2017 Dr Briony Larance Prof Dan Lubman Scott Wilson Stephen Ling Dr Ingrid van Beek -  
2016 Dr Louise Mewton Prof Louisa Degenhardt Brad Freeburn Lisa Ferguson Prof Alison Ritter -  
2015 Dr Amy Peacock Prof Steve Allsop Kathleen James Rose McCrohan A/Prof Raimondo Bruno -  
2014 Dr Sarah Larney Prof Maree Teesson Jimmy Perry A/Prof Adrian Dunlop - -  
2013 Dr Matthew Gullo Prof Paul Haber Steve Ella - - -  
2012 Dr Adrian Carter Prof Alison Ritter Annalee Stearne - - -  
2011 Dr Suzanne Nielsen Prof David Kavanagh Uncle Jack - - -  
2010 Michael Livingston Prof Amanda Baker - - - -  
2009 Dr Frances Kay-Lambkin Prof Robyn Richmond Kim Gates - - -  
2008 Dr Leanne Hides Prof Robin Room - - - -  
2007 Dr Katherine Mills Prof Kate Conigrave - - - -  
2006 Prof Tanya Chikritzhs Prof Shane Darke - - - -  
2005 A/ Prof Alan Clough Dr James Bell - - - -  
2004 A/ Prof Kyp Kypri Prof Jason White - - - -  

2011: First Peoples Award introduced | 2014: Clinician Award introduced | 2015: Mentor Award introduced | 2019: Mid Career Award introduced | 2021: Advocacy Award introduced


With the cancellation of this year's APSAD conference due to COVID-19 the annual APSAD Awards ceremony was moved to an online format.

APSAD President Professor Michael Farrell presented the 2020 APSAD Awards for Excellence in Science, Research and Practice at the online special ceremony. The six recipients of the APSAD Awards are recognised as having made an outstanding contribution to reducing the harms associated with alcohol and other drug use in Australasia.

 

2020 APSAD AWARD WINNERS

Senior Scientist Award A/Prof Robert Ali

Associate Professor Robert Ali ( MBBS FAFPHM, FAChAM DPH) is a public health physician and specialist in addiction medicine. Until October 2016 he was the clinical director of Drug & Alcohol Services South Australia; a role he held for 30 years. Currently he is a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Adelaide. Robert is a member of the Australian National Advisory Council on Alcohol and Drugs, member of the Cochrane Alcohol and Drug Group editorial board and the WHO Expert Advisory Panel on Drug Dependence and Alcohol Problems.


The Senior Scientist Award is for a scientist who has made an outstanding contribution to the field of substance use and misuse.

Mid Career Award - A/Prof Suzanne Nielsen

Associate Professor Suzanne Nielsen (BPharmSc[Hons] PhD MPS) is the Deputy Director of the Monash Addiction Research Centre in Melbourne, and is a current NHMRC Career Development Fellow. Suzi has been a registered pharmacist for over 20 years with clinical experience in the treatment of substance use disorders includes in specialist drug treatment and community-based alcohol and drug treatment settings in Australia and the United Kingdom. She has published over 135 scientific publications and given over 170 national and international conference presentations on her research, which has led to a greater understanding of how to identify and respond to prescription and over-the-counter drug-related problems. Her recent work has a focus on reducing opioid-related harm and overdose prevention.  Suzi has worked with Australian state and federal governments to reduce opioid-related and other drug harm.


The Mid Career Award is for significant contribution in the alcohol and other drug field.

Early Career Award - Dr Cheneal Puljević

Dr Cheneal Puljevic is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Health Services Research and the School of Public Health at the University of Queensland.

At the Centre for Health Services Research she is the Program Manager for the Global Substance Use and Mental Health unit, where she conducts and manages a number of research projects related to substance use, including the Queensland evaluation of the Tackling Alcohol-Fuelled Violence Policy (QUANTEM), and several projects using data from the Global Drug Survey.

At the School of Public Health, she is the co-coordinator of the CARP smoking cessation trial, and contributes to projects promoting smoking cessation among priority populations. Her primary research interest is smoking cessation among disadvantaged populations, with her PhD (completed in 2018) and current UQ Early Career Researcher Grant focusing on this topic. (https://researchers.uq.edu.au/researcher/22250)


The Early Career Award is for excellence in research relative to career opportunities.

Mentor Award - Prof Paul Dietze

Professor Paul Dietze is one of Australia’s leading alcohol and other drug epidemiologists with a significant national, and emerging international profile. He is an NHMRC Senior Research Fellow and a past ARC Future Fellow and VicHealth Public Health Research Fellow. With more than 20 years’ experience and an outstanding track record, his work has established internationally innovative surveillance systems and applied research designs that break new ground in the public health research into alcohol and other drug use and related harms in Australia. He has produced more than 290 journal articles along with many other reports of significant impact that have changed practice in the area of alcohol and other drugs in this country. During the course of his research career he has received more than $20 million of research funding. (https://www.burnet.edu.au/people/174_paul_dietze)

The Mentor Award recognises an individual who has made an important contribution to mentoring and supporting the career development of clinicians, researchers or students.

First Peoples Award - Robert Assan

I am both Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander. I was born in the Northern Territory, but my cultural background is from Thursday Island.

Training has been a big part of my work. And it gives me great satisfaction – working with health workers and seeing them come along in their ability to help individuals and families around alcohol and drugs. I have been able to offer training and support to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander workers around Australia, and to many other staff. The training helps them work with Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander people with alcohol or drug problems. I have also worked with individuals and communities, in the Northern Territory and in Queensland, to help them rethink their alcohol or drug use.

My current work involves both training and support of health workers, and one-to-one work with adolescents. This work is at the Cleveland Youth Detention Centre in Townsville. I like that sense of planting the seed that leads to change later on. You don’t always see the results straight away, but the seed is there. The young people are able to use that information that you’ve given them. I equip people with knowledge and skills and insight that can help them in life.

Recognises an individual that has made an important contribution to the advancement of the health of Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander and Māori peoples.

Clinician Award - Dr Anthony Gill

Dr Anthony (Tony) Gill is an Addiction Medicine Specialist who has worked in the Drug and Alcohol field for around 30 years. He has worked as a clinician and clinical leader primarily. He has held various Drug and Alcohol Clinical Director positions in NSW Local Health Districts and in the past in the NSW Ministry of Health. He is presently a Senior Staff Specialist in the Alcohol and Drug Service at St Vincent’s Hospital Sydney, and Chief Addiction Medicine Specialist in the NSW Ministry of Health. His interests in drug and alcohol include teaching and clinical service development and redesign, and he has worked extensively with general practitioners to enhance their activities in drug and alcohol.

Recognises excellence and leadership in clinical practice in the field of substance use in any discipline.entist Award A/Prof Robert Ali


The APSAD Conference and Awards Dinner was held at the Brooke Street Pier situated on Sullivans Cove in the waterfront area of Hobart. 

APSAD President Professor Michael Farrell presented the 2019 APSAD Awards for Excellence in Science, Research and Practice. The recipients of the APSAD Awards are recognised as having made an outstanding contribution to reducing the harms associated with alcohol and other drug use in Australasia. It is a special experience to formally acknowledge the dedication of our peers and celebrate the quality of their work.

APSAD Award Winners with APSAD President 
Left to Right: Michael Farrell (President); Catherine Quinn; Michael Doyle; Emmanuel Kuntsche (back); 
Kate Conigrave; Adrian Dunlop (back); Mark Montebello
 
 
Senior Scientist Award Prof Adrian Dunlop
Professor Adrian Dunlop has over 24 years experience as an addiction clinician and clinician/researcher, he currently serves as the Director and Addiction Medicine Senior Staff Specialist with Hunter New England Local Health District, Drug & Alcohol Clinical Services (2007-current). He is a Conjoint Professor with the School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Newcastle and a member of the Centre for Translational Neuroscience and Mental Health, University of Newcastle and Hunter Medical Research Institute. He was the Chief Addiction Medicine Specialist (2014 – 2018) for the Centre for Population Health, NSW Ministry of Health.
 
The Senior Scientist Award is for a scientist who has made an outstanding contribution to the field of substance use and misuse.
 
Mid Career Award A/Prof Emannuel Kuntsche
Professor Emmanuel Kuntsche has been trained in Psychology (University of Jena, Germany), Sociology (University of Jena, Germany), Public Health (University of Maastricht, the Netherlands) and Statistics (University of Essex, UK). After having mainly worked at Addiction Switzerland, an NGO located in Lausanne, he became a Professor of Public Health at La Trobe University, Melbourne, and the Director of the Centre for Alcohol Policy Research in 2017. He continues his part-time position as an Associate Professor of Developmental Psychopathology at the University of Nijmegen (the Netherlands) and as an Honorary Professor at the Institute of Psychology, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary.
 
The Mid Career Award is for significant contribution in the alcohol and other drug field.
 
Early Career Award Dr Catherine Quinn
Dr Catherine Quinn graduated with a Combined PhD and Clinical Masters in Psychology from Macquarie University in 2015. She currently holds an industry-funded Lives Lived Well Research Fellowship at the School of Psychology, University of Queensland and is a registered clinical psychologist. Dr Quinn is currently working closely with Lives Lived Well, a large alcohol and other drug treatment service, examining the efficacy of novel evidence-based interventions across community and residential treatment settings and the factors that impact their effective implementation. 
 
The Early Career Award is for excellence in research relative to career opportunities.
 
Mentor Award Prof Kate Conigrave
Kate is an Addiction Medicine Specialist and Public Health Physician based at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital. Her work combines treating individuals with alcohol, drug and tobacco problems; promoting the health of communities; and research and teaching.  Kate teaches a wide range of health professional students, including in medicine and public health. She provides clinical training sessions to practising health professionals, including doctors and Aboriginal drug and alcohol professionals. Kate is an editor of two practical texts: Addiction Medicine" (now in its 2nd edition), a guide for doctors and other health professionals; and the "Handbook of Aboriginal Drug and Alcohol Work", written for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health professionals.
 
 The Mentor Award recognises an individual who has made an important contribution to mentoring and supporting the career development of clinicians, researchers or students.
 
First Peoples Award Dr Michael Doyle
Michael is a Bardi person and Wingara Mura Research Fellow at the University of Sydney. Michael began his health career when he enrolled into the Aboriginal Health Worker training program in the Kimberley, while working in the general store of his home community of Djarindjin in 1997. Since then, Michael has worked in men’s health in the Aboriginal community controlled sector in Western Australia. He was worked for the Aboriginal Health Council of Western Australia and helped establish the peak body for Aboriginal community controlled health services in that state. Michael continues to work closely with colleagues in the Aboriginal community-controlled health sector. This includes serving as a member of the Aboriginal Health and Medical Research Council of NSW Human Research Ethics Committee. Michael has worked in research on alcohol and other drugs since 2008, including at the National Drug Research Institute, the Kirby Institute at the University of New South Wales. Since 2017 Michael has worked at the University of Sydney in the Centre of Research Excellence in Indigenous Health and Alcohol.
 
Recognises an individual that has made an important contribution to the advancement of the health of Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander and Māori peoples.
 
Clinician Award Dr Mark Montebello 
Dr Mark Montebello is an Addiction Medicine Specialist and Addiction Psychiatrist who has been a key mentor for doctors participating in postgraduate drug and alcohol medicine in NSW and across Australia. He has been the Director of Advanced Training in Addiction Psychiatry for the RANZCP, has been Chair of the Training Committee of the Chapter of Addiction Medicine RACP, is a Conjoint Senior Lecturer with the University of New South Wales and University of Sydney, and is Clinical Director for Drug and Alcohol Services for North Sydney Local Health District.   
 
Recognises excellence and leadership in clinical practice in the field of substance use in any discipline.

2018 APSAD Award Winners announced 

The APSAD Conference Dinner and Awards was held at Maritime Room Auckland. The recipients of the APSAD Awards are recognised as having made an outstanding contribution to reducing the harms associated with alcohol and other drug use in Australasia. It is a special experience to formally acknowledge the dedication of our peers and celebrate the quality of their work. 

 Award winners group photo reduce size
Left to Right: APSAD President Anthony (Tony) Gill; Gillian Gould; Nicholas Lintzeris; Billie Bonevski
 
Early Career Award Winner Gillian Gould
 
A/Prof Gillian Gould has made a highly significant and unique contribution to AOD research into Indigenous smoking cessation as an early career researcher, obtaining her PhD in 2015. Gould’s PhD by publication was an outstanding contribution to understanding how anti-tobacco messages need to be targeted better to Indigenous communities and in particular, to pregnant smokers. Since moving to University of Newcastle (UON) in 2015, Gould achieved an extremely impressive track record by being awarded $5.5million in funding, and since the start of her PhD, published 39 peer-reviewed papers. She is currently funded by two prestigious research fellowships from NHMRC and Cancer Institute NSW (CINSW) until the end of 2018, and has already secured a NHMRC Translating Research Into Practice Fellowship co-funded by CINSW ($100,000) commencing in 2019. Gould established and leads a new research stream in Indigenous smoking for the School of Medicine and Public Health at UON on culturally competent approaches in the vital area of smoking cessation during pregnancy. Gould is highly effective at combining her extensive clinical experience as a general practitioner, a Tobacco Treatment Specialist and public health researcher to advance knowledge and find pragmatic solutions in this important area. She has worked intensively at a community level with Aboriginal people for several years to build trusted relationships, which allows her to co-develop many Indigenous tobacco programs.
 
The Early Career Award is for excellence in research relative to career opportunities.
 
 
Senior Scientist Award Winner Nicholas Lintzeris 
 
Prof Lintzeris has been highly active for over a quarter of a century in drug and alcohol clinical service delivery, research, professional education and policy developments in Australia and has been a key leader in many important developments in our field across this time. He is Foundation Fellow of the Chapter of Addiction Medicine in the Royal Australasian College of Physicians. He has an international reputation as an expert in the drug and alcohol field with interests across opioids, cannabinoids, stimulants, alcohol, benzodiazepines and ‘new’ psychoactive substances. Prof Lintzeris graduated from the University of Tasmania (MBBS, B Med Sci) then worked in the public drug and alcohol sector in Victoria. He helped establish Turning Point Alcohol and Drug Centre as a lead NGO in the field in Victoria in the 1990s. He subsequently has led drug and alcohol services in South West Sydney, Sydney and South East Sydney Local Health Districts in NSW including important clinical service re-design and innovation. He has been Chief Addiction Medicine specialist for NSW Health, helping develop and implement a clinical outcomes and quality improvement process across public drug and alcohol services throughout NSW that is currently being implemented. He has been highly active in policy development for over two decades, sitting on numerous state and national committees and publishing multiple clinical guidelines in the field. Professor Lintzeris' PhD examined the use of buprenorphine in inpatient and outpatient opiate withdrawal and provided important data to enable the safe and effective rapid uptake of buprenorphine for withdrawal treatment in Australia. He has contributed to state and national opiate treatment guidelines in addiction treatment and played a lead role in the current national and NSW opiate treatment clinical guidelines. He was awarded the Neil Hamilton Fairley Clinical Research Post-doctoral Fellowship by the NH&MRC and led a pivotal RCT of injectable heroin treatment through the National Addiction Centre in the UK as well as psychopharmacological studies of opiates and benzodiazepines.
 
The Senior Scientist Award is for a scientist who has made an outstanding contribution to the field of substance use and misuse.
 
Mentor Award Winner Billie Bonevski 
 
Professor Billie Bonevski is a health behaviour scientist and Professor at the University of Newcastle (UON), Faculty of Health and Medicine. She is a NHMRC Career Development Fellow (CDF Level 2: 2014-2018) and the recipient of the prestigious Faculty of Health and Medicine’s Gladys M Brawn Research Award. Bonevski completed a scholarship-supported PhD at the University of Newcastle, in the Discipline of Behavioural Science in Relation to Medicine after gaining a Psychology Honours degree (1st Class with WH Ward Prize for Best Applied Thesis). Immediately following her PhD she completed a World Health Organisation-sponsored postdoctoral travel fellowship with Cancer Research UK and the Cochrane Collaboration’s Tobacco Addiction Review Group, both based at Oxford University.

"She is a champion for health equity and an advocate for gender equity and this is reflected not only in her research outputs but in her approach to building the capacity of new researchers. Her supportive approach is highly effective; her students and mentees achieve remarkable success in their careers and progress to make substantial contributions to tobacco research and the community in general. She is an inspiring role model (her young female ECR twitter followers refer to her as their "research idol") not only for productivity and achieving career goals, but also for showing them how to ensure their research makes a meaningful difference to people's lives. Evidence of the effectiveness of her mentoring is in the metrics: she has supervised 19 students, 15 of those PhD students, all on PhD scholarships, and 7 winning awards for PhD excellence from their institutions (University of Newcastle, Monash) or national awards (eg, Council of Australian Public Health Institutions, Cancer Institute NSW)."

 The Mentor Award recognises an individual who has made an important contribution to mentoring and supporting the career development of clinicians, researchers or students
 

Congratulations to the 2017 APSAD Award Winners

The APSAD Conference Dinner and Awards was held at The Park overlooking the Albert Park Lake. Incoming APSAD President Dr Tony Gill presented the 2017 APSAD Awards. The recipients of the APSAD Awards are recognised as having made an outstanding contribution to reducing the harms associated with alcohol and other drug use in Australasia. It is a special experience to formally acknowledge the dedication of our peers and celebrate the quality of their work. 

2017 APSAD Award winners resized

Left to right: Briony Larance, Ingrid van Beek, Stephen Ling, Dan Lubman, Scott Wilson

Mentor Award  Dr Ingrid van Beek

Ingrid is a public health and addiction medicine physician who has been a leader in the Harm Minimisation and public health sector for many years. She is renowned and respected both nationally and internationally and has long been the voice of reason social justice and disadvantaged people, such as sex workers, people who inject drugs and at-risk youth. Ingrid was also the founding Medical Director of the first and only Medically Supervised Injecting Centre in the southern hemisphere from 2000 until 2008 and the author of a book “In The Eye Of The Needle” which tells the story of the MSIC, how it came to be, the ongoing controversy, and fight to defend its existence.

The Mentor Award recognises an individual who has made an important contribution to mentoring and supporting the career development of clinicians, researchers or students.

Early Career Award  Dr Briony Larance 

Briony Larance is an NHMRC Australian Public Health Early Career Fellowship recipient and has worked at the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre (NDARC), Faculty of Medicine, UNSW, since 2004. Her research interests include opioid dependence, opioid substitution therapy and pharmaceutical opioids. Her research focuses on understanding the trajectories and health consequences of pharmaceutical opioid use among diverse populations, including chronic pain patients and people who are opioid dependent and/or inject drugs. 

The Early Career Award is for excellence in research relative to career opportunities.+

First Peoples Award  Scott Wilson 

Scott has had an eminent career, being a key advisor to Commonwealth and State Governments in relation to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (Indigenous) alcohol and other drug issues over the past two decades. This includes as the Deputy Co-Chair of the National Indigenous Drug and Alcohol Committee between 2001 and 2014. Amongst his many other contributions, Scott has acted as the Australian delegate to the United Nations “Beyond 2008” International Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) Forum, Vienna. As founding and current CEO of the Aboriginal Drug and Alcohol Council, SA (ADAC) Scott is responsible for delivering a range of innovative services and programs to Aboriginal communities across South Australia. 

The First Peoples Award recognises an individual that has made an important contribution to the advancement of the health of Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander or Māori peoples.

Clinician Award  Stephen Ling  

Stephen Ling is a pioneer nurse practitioner in the alcohol and drug field in Australia. Mr Ling was one of the first of a very small number of clinical nurse consultants in the alcohol and drug field who applied for nurse practitioner status when this became possible. Since attaining this recognition, he has continued to lead the nursing field in NSW, though his clinical work and involvement in teaching and research.

Clinician Award recognises excellence and leadership in clinical practice in substance use in any discipline.

Senior Scientist Award  Prof Dan Lubman

Professor Dan Lubman is a Psychiatrist and Addiction Medicine Specialist. He has worked across mental health and drug treatment settings in both the UK and Australia. He is Director of Turning Point and Professor of Addiction Studies and Services at Monash University. Dr Lubman’s research is wide-ranging and includes investigating the impact of alcohol and drug use on brain function, the relationship between substance use and mental disorder, as well as the development of targeted intervention programs within school, primary care, mental health and drug treatment settings. 

The Senior Scientist Award is for a scientist who has made an outstanding contribution to the field of substance use and misuse.


Congratulations to the 2016 APSAD Award Winners

AWARD WINNER small size

Left to Right: Louisa Degenhardt; Lisa Ferguson; Brad Freeburn; Alison Ritter; Louise Mewton;

Mentor Award  Prof Alison Ritter 

Professor Alison Ritter has been an exemplary mentor in the AOD sector for over twenty years, from her years as Head of Research at Turning Point (1994 – 2006) through to her past decade as the Director of the Drug Policy Modelling Program (2006 – present).  Alison has worked tirelessly to provide support and career advice to her mentees, and does so generously and in accordance with the individual’s own goals, interests and aspirations. Through her leadership of DPMP, Alison has fostered a vibrant and active multi-disciplinary research team, with an international reputation for excellence in drug policy research and demonstrable policy impact.

Alison’s commitment to mentoring extends beyond DPMP. Alison is a thoughtful and generous mentor to early – and mid-career researchers from a range of other institutions and acts as a formal mentor to junior academics in other disciplines at UNSW through ECR mentoring scheme (2010 to present) and in the UNSW Academic Women in Leadership scheme (2010 to present). 

The Mentor Award recognises an individual who has made an important contribution to mentoring and supporting the career development of clinicians, researchers or students.

Early Career Award  Dr Louise Mewton 

Dr Louise Mewton’s exceptional and inspiring contributions to drug and alcohol research have been widely recognised both nationally and internationally.  Focusing on the prevalence, causes and prevention of substance use disorders in young people, her highly innovative program of research makes links across epidemiology, information technology, neuropsychiatry and prevention research, and reflects global research priorities.

The Early Career Award is for excellence in research relative to career opportunities.

First Peoples Award  Bad Freeburn

Brad Freeburn is a Bundjalung man, born at Casino on the North Coast of New South Wales. He is the coordinator of the Drug and Alcohol and Mental Health Unit of the Aboriginal Medical Service Co-op Ltd Redfern. Brad became interested in Indigenous health issues, graduating as an Aboriginal Health Worker in 1993. Having worked in the drug and alcohol field since 1995, before that in the private sector

For the past 20 years, Brad has worked tirelessly to reduce improve the wellbeing of both his clients and advocating for the needs of other Aboriginal people at local, state and national level for culturally appropriate alcohol and other drug services.

The First Peoples Award recognises an individual that has made an important contribution to the advancement of the health of Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander or Māori peoples.

Clinician Award Lisa Ferguson

In her role at St Vincent’s Hospital Sydney Lisa works tirelessly as the only Drug and Alcohol Clinical Nurse Consultant at this 320-bed hospital to ensure patients have access to Drug and Alcohol interventions as well as continuation of care and effective discharge planning for all patients coming through pharmacotherapy treatment. 

Clinician Award recognises excellence and leadership in clinical practice in substance use in any discipline.

Senior Scientist Award  Prof Louisa Degenhardt 

Louisa is an extremely talented and productive researcher and is a global leader in the addiction research field. She has dedicated her career to exploring the complexities of drug-related harm and ensuring policy makers, clinicians and the community have current and comprehensive information to make sound, informed decisions, which of course is crucial in the drug and alcohol field. Her research has already gone a long way to establishing a comprehensive evidence base for drug policy and clinical practice, both in Australia and internationally. Louisa’s work documenting what is and is not known regarding the epidemiology and health effects of illicit drugs has 


Congratulations to the 2015 APSAD Award Winners

2015 Award winnersAward senior scientist

Left to Right: Raimondo Bruno; Amy Peacock; Rose McCrohan; Kathleen James; Steve Allsop; & President Rose Neild

Mentor Award  A/Prof Raimondo Bruno

As a researcher committed to advancing young researchers’ careers before his own, Raimondo Bruno is a worthy winner of the inaugural APSAD Mentor Award. In just 10 years, he has mentored 80 postgraduate students and early career researchers while maintaining many teaching and research roles. His commitment to helping students and young researchers is reflected in results: half of his Clinical Psychology research students are employed in the sector and many have received awards including a Rhodes Scholarship.

Early Career Award  Dr Amy Peacock

Amy Peacock is an emerging leader in the AOD field. She has authored 29 publications and is already an international authority on the harms of mixing alcohol and energy drinks – all within four years of starting her research career. She led the first systematic review published internationally comparing harms of consuming alcohol mixed with energy drinks, and her work has been incorporated into European food safety guidelines.

First Peoples Award  Kathleen James

Kathleen James is an Aboriginal woman who has worked as a counsellor in the addictions field since 2008. Kate is a role model for other Aboriginal staff and clients and provides leadership in providing culturally secure services to the Aboriginal community. She has run youth programs at Banksia Hill Detention Centre and established programs to reach disadvantaged young Aboriginal people, including for students at a local high school, and is currently the only Aboriginal counsellor at the Rockingham branch of Palmerston Association – a not for profit providing counselling and support for people with AOD issues.

Clinician Award  Rose McCrohan

Victoria’s first Alcohol and Other Drug Nurse Practitioner, Rose McCrohan has been a trailblazer in AOD nursing treatment over almost 25 years, managing or helping establish multiple withdrawal programs. “Rose’s knowledge and experience have been invaluable to the sector. Her ability to create an environment for positive change for clients has impacted on many lives,” her nominator said.  Rose is also part of the ReGen team setting up Victoria’s first mother and baby withdrawal service.

Senior Scientist Award  Prof Steve Allsop

Steve Allsop is an internationally renowned researcher in AOD who has made a significant contribution to the field over the past 30 years, including through mentoring many developing researchers. Deputy chair of the Australian National Advisory Council on Alcohol and Drugs, Steve contributes to national and international policy debate and research and has facilitated the debate on state/territory and national drug strategies, including involvement in developing the previous National Amphetamine-Type Stimulants Strategy.