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Emeritus Professor Graham Martin
Emeritus Professor

Graham Martin

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Overview

Background

Professor Graham Martin OAM, MD, FRANZCP, DPM works as a Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist with skills in individual and family therapy. His research interests have been in Early Intervention and Promotion of Mental Health with special reference to prevention of suicide in young people and non-suicidal self-injury.

Professor Martin was Director of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at The University of Queensland, and Clinical Director of RCH Health Service District Child and Youth Mental Health Service (CYMHS) (2001-2014). He now works part time in private practice, but continues to supervise students and publish regarding his research interests.

From 1986 to 2001 he was Clinical Director of Southern Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS) in Adelaide, and is a clinician, researcher, writer and commentator. Thirty years of clinical immersion in direct clinician work, supervision, systemic practice, and child psychiatry and family therapy teaching, underpins development of preventive programs in mental illness, and programs for promotion of mental health in families, communities, schools, the defence force cadets and other systems.

Graham has been dedicated to suicide prevention since 1987, and is a member of the International Association for Suicide Prevention and the International Association for Suicide Research. He was a member of the Advisory Council Australian National Youth Suicide Prevention Strategy and Evaluation Working Group (1994-99), the writing team for the Australian Suicide Prevention Strategy (2000, 2007), the National Advisory Council for Suicide Prevention (2003-8), and was a National Advisor on Suicide Prevention to the Australian Government (2009-2012). Graham is Director of the Centre for Suicide Prevention Studies in Young People at UQ (http://www.suicidepreventionstudies.org/index.html).

Graham was Suicide Prevention Australia (SPA) chairman (1995-2001), convening 6 national suicide prevention conferences, led the team developing the first Media and Suicide Resource Kit (‘Achieving the Balance’, 1998), became a Life Member of SPA (2004), was awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia (2006), a ‘Jackstar’ award for 10 years contribution to Inspire Foundation’s ‘ReachOut’ program (2007), the 2008 SPA ‘Lifetime Contribution to Suicide Prevention Research’ award, and the Rowe-Zonta International Prize 2010. Graham was Catholic Education Queensland Travelling Scholar (2008-9). In 2014, Professor Martin was awarded the SPA ‘Lifetime Contribution to Suicide Prevention’ award, and in 2015 was awarded a Royal Australia and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists Citation for his contributions to Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

Graham was an originator of the Australian Network for Promotion, Prevention and Early Intervention program (Auseinet, 1997-2009), and Director until 2001. He is Editor in Chief for the online journal AMH (Advances in Mental Health, 2009 to date), formerly the Australian eJournal for the Advancement of Mental Health (1999-2009). Graham chaired the Queensland Mental Health Promotion, Prevention and Early Intervention committee, and was a board member for Mates in Construction, an industry leader in suicide prevention for the construction industry.

Graham is one of the editors of “Mental Health Promotion and Young People: Concepts and Challenges” (2001, McGraw Hill, Sydney), published in English, Italian and Korean. He is the author of "Taking Charge: A journey of recovery" (2013); "Sensual Haiku" a book of poetry for lovers (2013), and "Essays on Prevention in Mental Health" (2014), and is currently writing a biopic: "The Making of a Child Psychiatrist" (in draft, 2015).

The main focus of Graham’s work is the area of self-injury in young people, with clinical, community, therapy and research programs. His team has recently completed the largest ever, national survey of self-injury for the Department of Health and Ageing (The Australian National Epidemiological Survey of Self-Injury).

In his spare time he trained for 20 years in Karate, and was a Nidan black belt, and Sensei, with Hoshindo Karate International (from 2003-2009).

Availability

Emeritus Professor Graham Martin is:
Not available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery and Medical Science, University College London
  • Postgraduate Diploma, Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists
  • Postgraduate Diploma, Flinders University
  • Postgraduate Diploma, Institution to be confirmed
  • Doctoral Diploma of Medicine, Flinders University
  • Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists, Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists

Research interests

  • Group Therapy for repeated self harm in young people

    Randomised controlled trial of a manualised short term program based on a Cognitive Behavioural Model (with Prof. Phillip Hazell, Newcastle University)

  • Attitudes to Drug Use and Abuse in Australia

    Funded by the Australian National Council on Drugs, this national study focuses on young people aged 12-18 years

  • Early Detection of Depression in High School

    Bayside project funded by Queensland Health, using tiered model of intervention from 'Universal' (year 1 high school), through 'Selective' to Indicated

  • Suicide and its Prevention

    Main focus is Suicide Prevention in Young People (aged up to 24 years) which includes addressing biological, family, social and cultural risk factors. Current interest focuses on Mental Health (as health) and its Promotion as a major preventive strategy

  • National Study of self harm in Australia

    Epidemiological study across all ages to inform reserachers and policy makers of the incidence and prevealence of Self-Injury and its role in Deliberate Self Harm

Research impacts

Professor Martin received more than $14m in collaborative research grants during his career, and was known for his ground-breaking research in Prevention of Suicide in Young people, with particular reference to schools. His collaborative research work in Non-suicidal Self-injury has been at the forefront of thinking and program development in Australia. Professor Martin has published over 200 individual and collaborative research papers, 60 books and training resources and other reports, 18 chapters in books, 46 Editorials in journals. He was the creative force behind, and then an editor of, 8 journals.

His work has been cited 3866 times (2939 times since 2012, with an h-index of 31, and an i-10 index of 68).

Works

Search Professor Graham Martin’s works on UQ eSpace

228 works between 1992 and 2021

61 - 80 of 228 works

2012

Journal Article

On help-seeking

Martin, Graham (2012). On help-seeking. Advances in Mental Health, 11 (1), 2-6. doi: 10.1080/18374905.2012.11001065

On help-seeking

2012

Journal Article

Mind full or mindful: A report on mindfulness and psychological health in healthy adolescents

Tan, Lucy G. B. and Martin, Graham (2012). Mind full or mindful: A report on mindfulness and psychological health in healthy adolescents. International Journal of Adolescence and Youth, 21 (1), 64-74. doi: 10.1080/02673843.2012.709174

Mind full or mindful: A report on mindfulness and psychological health in healthy adolescents

2012

Journal Article

Child maltreatment, subsequent non-suicidal self-injury and the mediating roles of dissociation, alexithymia and self-blame

Swannell, Sarah, Martin, Graham, Page, Andrew, Hasking, Penelope, Hazell, Philip, Taylor, Anne and Protani, Melinda (2012). Child maltreatment, subsequent non-suicidal self-injury and the mediating roles of dissociation, alexithymia and self-blame. Child Abuse and Neglect, 36 (7-8), 572-584. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2012.05.005

Child maltreatment, subsequent non-suicidal self-injury and the mediating roles of dissociation, alexithymia and self-blame

2012

Journal Article

On being online

Martin, Graham (2012). On being online. Advances in Mental Health, 10 (2), 102-105. doi: 10.1080/18374905.2012.11001040

On being online

2012

Journal Article

Children living with burn scarring: can cosmetic camouflage improve psychosocial well-being?

James-Chadwick, Jessica, Newcombe, Peter, Martin, Graham and Kimble, Roy (2012). Children living with burn scarring: can cosmetic camouflage improve psychosocial well-being?. Journal of Wound Technology, 15, 75-76.

Children living with burn scarring: can cosmetic camouflage improve psychosocial well-being?

2012

Journal Article

On wisdom in mental health care

Martin, Graham (2012). On wisdom in mental health care. Advances in Mental Health, 10 (3), 210-215. doi: 10.1080/18374905.2012.11001053

On wisdom in mental health care

2011

Journal Article

MATES in construction: Impact of a multimodal, community-based program for suicide prevention in the construction industry

Gullestrup, Jorgen, Lequertier, Belinda and Martin, Graham (2011). MATES in construction: Impact of a multimodal, community-based program for suicide prevention in the construction industry. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 8 (11), 4180-4196. doi: 10.3390/ijerph8114180

MATES in construction: Impact of a multimodal, community-based program for suicide prevention in the construction industry

2011

Journal Article

Effectiveness of Australian youth suicide prevention initiatives

Page, Andrew, Taylor, Richard, Gunnell, David, Carter, Greg, Morrell, Stephen and Martin, Graham (2011). Effectiveness of Australian youth suicide prevention initiatives. British Journal of Psychiatry, 199 (5), 423-429. doi: 10.1192/bjp.bp.111.093856

Effectiveness of Australian youth suicide prevention initiatives

2011

Journal Article

Attributable risk Of psychiatric and socio-economic factors for suicide from individual-level, population-based studies: A systematic review

Li, Zhuoyang, Page, Andrew, Martin, Graham and Taylor, Richard (2011). Attributable risk Of psychiatric and socio-economic factors for suicide from individual-level, population-based studies: A systematic review. Social Science and Medicine, 72 (4), 608-616. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2010.11.008

Attributable risk Of psychiatric and socio-economic factors for suicide from individual-level, population-based studies: A systematic review

2011

Journal Article

Methodological issues associated with collecting sensitive information over the telephone - Experience from an Australian non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) prevalence study

Taylor, Anne W., Martin, Graham, Dal Grande, Eleonora, Swannell, Sarah, Fullerton, Simon, Hazell, Philip and Harrison, James E. (2011). Methodological issues associated with collecting sensitive information over the telephone - Experience from an Australian non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) prevalence study. BMC Medical Research Methodology, 11 (Article number 20) 20, 1-7. doi: 10.1186/1471-2288-11-20

Methodological issues associated with collecting sensitive information over the telephone - Experience from an Australian non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) prevalence study

2011

Edited Outputs

Advances in Mental Health

Advances in Mental Health. (2011). 10 (1)

Advances in Mental Health

2011

Book

Seeking solutions to self-injury: A guide for school staff

Martin, G., Hasking, P., Swannell, S., Lee, M. and McAllister, M. (2011). Seeking solutions to self-injury: A guide for school staff. Brisbane, Australia: Centre for Suicide Prevention Studies, The University of Queensland.

Seeking solutions to self-injury: A guide for school staff

2010

Edited Outputs

Advances in Mental Health

Advances in Mental Health. (2010). 9 (3)

Advances in Mental Health

2010

Journal Article

Self-injury in Australia: A community survey

Martin, Graham, Swannell, Sarah V., Hazell, Philip L., Harrison, James E. and Taylor, Anne W. (2010). Self-injury in Australia: A community survey. Medical Journal of Australia, 193 (9), 506-510. doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2010.tb04033.x

Self-injury in Australia: A community survey

2010

Journal Article

Cutting on-line: Self-injury and internet usage

Swannell, Sarah, Martin, Graham, Krysinska, Karolina, Kay, Tracey, Olsson, Katherine and Win, Aung (2010). Cutting on-line: Self-injury and internet usage. Advances in Mental Health, 9 (2), 177-189.

Cutting on-line: Self-injury and internet usage

2010

Edited Outputs

Advances in Mental Health

Advances in Mental Health. (2010). 9 (2)

Advances in Mental Health

2010

Journal Article

Brief report: Emotion regulation and coping as moderators in the relationship between personality and self-injury

Hasking, Penelope A., Coric, Sarah J., Swannell, Sarah, Martin, Graham, Thompson, Holly Knox and Frost, Aaron D. J. (2010). Brief report: Emotion regulation and coping as moderators in the relationship between personality and self-injury. Journal of Adolescence, 33 (5), 767-773. doi: 10.1016/j.adolescence.2009.12.006

Brief report: Emotion regulation and coping as moderators in the relationship between personality and self-injury

2010

Journal Article

Editorial: On self-injury

Martin, Graham (2010). Editorial: On self-injury. Advances in Mental Health, 9 (2), 106-111.

Editorial: On self-injury

2010

Journal Article

Cutting on-line: Self-injury and the internet

Swannell, Sarah, Oam, Graham Martin, Krysinska, Karolina, Kay, Tracey, Olsson, Katherine and Win, Aung (2010). Cutting on-line: Self-injury and the internet. Advances in Mental Health, 9 (2), 177-189. doi: 10.5172/jamh.9.2.177

Cutting on-line: Self-injury and the internet

2010

Journal Article

Editorial: On bullying in Australia

Martin, Graham (2010). Editorial: On bullying in Australia. Advances in Mental Health, 9 (1), 2-7.

Editorial: On bullying in Australia

Funding

Past funding

  • 2009 - 2012
    A prospective investigation of self-injury, suicidal ideation and the psychological distress in Australian secondary school students (ARC Discovery Project administered by Monash Uni)
    Monash University
    Open grant
  • 2009 - 2010
    Resilience plus: development of a resilience building school-based program for Indigenous and non-Indigenous children in Queensland.
    Queensland Health
    Open grant
  • 2007 - 2011
    The epidemiology of deliberate self injury and its relationship to suicidal behaviour in Australia.
    Department of Health & Ageing
    Open grant
  • 2007 - 2009
    Development of a social, cultural and spiritual wellbeing population health framework for Aboriginal and Torres Islander people of Queensland
    Centre for Rural & Remote Mental Health Queensland
    Open grant
  • 2003 - 2008
    Evaluation Of An Integrated Strategy To Promote The Health Of People With Chronic Or Recurring Mental Disorders
    Health Research Partnership in Mental Health
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Emeritus Professor Graham Martin is:
Not available for supervision

Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Arts on Our Mind: The effectiveness of creative activities in promoting mental wellbeing and reducing psychopathological symptoms in children of families with a mental illness

    Associate Advisor

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Emeritus Professor Graham Martin directly for media enquiries about:

  • ADHD
  • Anxiety
  • Anxiety management
  • Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
  • Behaviour disorders
  • Child psychiatry
  • Depression
  • Family therapy
  • Mental health and society
  • Mental health and stigma
  • Mental health promotion
  • Psychiatry
  • Suicide
  • Suicide prevention
  • Youth suicide

Need help?

For help with finding experts, story ideas and media enquiries, contact our Media team:

communications@uq.edu.au