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Professor Steve Kisely
Professor

Steve Kisely

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 3176 6438

Overview

Background

Professor Kisely is a psychiatrist and public health physician with health services research experience in the UK, Australia & Canada. After graduating from the University of Bristol, he worked in New Zealand in various medical and surgical specialties, before starting psychiatric training in Auckland. He finished his psychiatric training in Western Australia & Manchester, including a Masters degree by research on atypical chest pain. While working as a lecturer in psychiatry he completed a research Doctorate on the effect of physical disorder on psychiatric outcome in primary care. Professor Kisely worked at the Universities of Western Australia and Dalhousie University in Canada before returning to Australia in 2007.

Availability

Professor Steve Kisely is:
Available for supervision

Qualifications

  • Doctoral Diploma of Medicine, The University of Manchester
  • Doctor of Philosophy, Griffith University
  • Doctoral Diploma, The University of Queensland

Research impacts

Steve has been a principal or chief investigator on research and infrastructure grants at national and state level worth $17.4 million, as well as co- or associate investigator on grants worth an additional $3 million.with 10 years of continuous funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the Australian Research Council. He is the author of 749 publications (686 of which appeared in invited chapters or peer-reviewed journals, publications & conference proceedings, 401 being full-length papers) on physical/psychiatric co-morbidity, psychiatric epidemiology/pharmaco-epidemiology & health services research. These include 5 papers in the British Medical Journal on severe personality disorder, community treatment orders and public health. He has also published in The Lancet, Archives of General Psychiatry (JAMA Psychiatry), Lancet Psychiatry, Schizophrenia Bulletin, the British Journal of Psychiatry & and the CMAJ. These have generated 17880 citations with an h-index of 61 in Google Scholar.He was also winner of a Special Judges Award in the category of Best Use of IT in Clinical Care in Great Britain as part of the 1998 National Health Care IT Effectiveness Awards. In 2015, he received the Senior Research Award of the Royal Australian & New Zealand College of Psychiatrists as well as the Alex Leighton Award from the Canadian Psychiatric Association and Canadian Academy of Psychiatric Epidemiology Association. He is also a distinguished fellow of the Canadian Psychiatric Association.

Professor Kisely’s work has focussed on the use of both routine data and meta-analyses to inform health service delivery and policy in both Canada and Australia. For instance his work on mental health surveillance using administrative data, commenced in Canada but completed in Australia, contributed to the development and adoption of a standard case definition for the surveillance of psychiatric disorders by the Public Health Agency of Canada. This work also lead to being engaged by the Mental Health Commission of Canada to co-author a report on Mental Health Data needs in Canada. Professor Kisely was subsequently the 1st author on an invited review for the CMAJ on the use of administrative data in the surveillance of alcohol-related harm. A further research project on emergency psychiatric services, funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research but completed in Australia, led to the roll-out of a mobile crisis service across Capital Health - the largest DHA in Nova Scotia with 40% of its province's population. In addition pharmaco-epidemiological work on the metabolic consequences of psychotropic med action using routine health data led to the Canadian Psychiatric Association‘s R.O. Jones Award in 2008.

Professor Kisely’s work on administrative data and pharmaco-vigilance led to an invitation to serve on the Research and Investment Advisory Committee of the Australian e-Health Research Centre of the CSIRO. Professor Kisely also served on the Management Committee of the NCRIS funded Population Health Research Network to promote the linkage and use of administrative data across Australia by researchers and decision-makers (2009-2013). He is currently a member of the Committees for Research of both the Royal Australasian College of Physicians, and the Royal Australian & New Zealand College of Psychiatrists.

Works

Search Professor Steve Kisely’s works on UQ eSpace

794 works between 1990 and 2025

661 - 680 of 794 works

2005

Conference Publication

The epidemiology of personality disorder

Kisely, S. (2005). The epidemiology of personality disorder. 15th Annual Nova Scotia Hospital Academic Day, Dartmouth, Canada, May 2005.

The epidemiology of personality disorder

2005

Conference Publication

Religious affiliation's relation to adolescent suicide in Nova Scotia

Bouchard, M., Langille, D., Kisely, S. and Hughes, J. (2005). Religious affiliation's relation to adolescent suicide in Nova Scotia. 23rd World Congress of the International Association for Suicide Prevention, Durban, South Africa, 13 - 16 September, 2005.

Religious affiliation's relation to adolescent suicide in Nova Scotia

2005

Conference Publication

Barriers to access: How shared care improves patient care

Kisely, S. (2005). Barriers to access: How shared care improves patient care. CPA-CPD Institute. Annual Meeting of the Atlantic Provinces Psychiatric Association, St John's, Newfoundland, Canada, June 2005.

Barriers to access: How shared care improves patient care

2005

Conference Publication

Collaboration in public health in Atlantic Canada

Kisely, S. (2005). Collaboration in public health in Atlantic Canada. Atlantic Canada Medical Officers of Health Conference, St John's, Canada, June 2005.

Collaboration in public health in Atlantic Canada

2005

Journal Article

Psychological interventions for symptomatic management of non-specific chest pain in patients with normal coronary anatomy

Kisely, Steve R., Campbell, Leslie Anne and Skerritt, Paul (2005). Psychological interventions for symptomatic management of non-specific chest pain in patients with normal coronary anatomy. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (1 Article No. CD004101), 1-37. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004101.pub2

Psychological interventions for symptomatic management of non-specific chest pain in patients with normal coronary anatomy

2005

Conference Publication

Outcomes and controversies in community treatment orders

Kisely, S. (2005). Outcomes and controversies in community treatment orders. Waterford Hospital Annual Scientific Day, St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada, November 2005.

Outcomes and controversies in community treatment orders

2005

Conference Publication

An international comparison of health service use in two jurisdictions with and without outpatient commitment

Kisely, Stephen, Preston, Neil, Xiao, Jianguo and Smith, Mark (2005). An international comparison of health service use in two jurisdictions with and without outpatient commitment. 29th International Congress on Law and Mental Health, Paris, France, July 2005.

An international comparison of health service use in two jurisdictions with and without outpatient commitment

2005

Conference Publication

Inequities in access to care as a contributor to higher mortality in individuals who have had psychiatric treatment

Kisely, S., Smith, M., Lawrence, D. and Maaten, S. (2005). Inequities in access to care as a contributor to higher mortality in individuals who have had psychiatric treatment. Annual Scientific Meeting of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, Edinburgh, Scotland, 20 - 23 June, 2005.

Inequities in access to care as a contributor to higher mortality in individuals who have had psychiatric treatment

2005

Conference Publication

The portrayal of suicide in the media

Kisely, S. (2005). The portrayal of suicide in the media. 3rd Annual Nova Scotian Symposium on Suicide, Halifax, Canada, May 2005.

The portrayal of suicide in the media

2005

Conference Publication

The media portrayal of suicide: Translating a province-wide survey into action

Kisely, S. and Denney, J. (2005). The media portrayal of suicide: Translating a province-wide survey into action. Canadian Injury Prevention & Safety Promotion Conference, Halifax, Canada, 6 - 8 November, 2005. Canadian Child Care Federation.

The media portrayal of suicide: Translating a province-wide survey into action

2005

Conference Publication

An international comparison of health service use in two jursdictions with and without outpatient commitment

Kisely, S., Smith, M., Lawrence, D. and Maaten, S. (2005). An international comparison of health service use in two jursdictions with and without outpatient commitment. 29th International Congress on Law and Mental Health, Paris, France, July 2005.

An international comparison of health service use in two jursdictions with and without outpatient commitment

2005

Other Outputs

Public health in Atlantic Canada: A discussion paper

Jensen, L. and Kisely, S. (2005). Public health in Atlantic Canada: A discussion paper. Canada: Public Health Agency of Canada (Atlantic Office).

Public health in Atlantic Canada: A discussion paper

2004

Journal Article

Compulsory community treatment and admission rates: Author's reply

Kisely, S. (2004). Compulsory community treatment and admission rates: Author's reply. British Journal of Psychiatry, 185 (6), 519-520. doi: 10.1192/bjp.185.6.519

Compulsory community treatment and admission rates: Author's reply

2004

Journal Article

Exploring the limits of evidence-based health policy: The example of community treatment orders

Kisely, S., Preston, N. and Campbell, L. (2004). Exploring the limits of evidence-based health policy: The example of community treatment orders. Clinical & Investigative Medicine, 27 (4), 176-177.

Exploring the limits of evidence-based health policy: The example of community treatment orders

2004

Journal Article

What determines compulsory community treatment? A logistic regression analysis using linked mental health and offender databases

Xiao, Jianguo, Preston, Neil J. and Kisely, Steve (2004). What determines compulsory community treatment? A logistic regression analysis using linked mental health and offender databases. Australian And New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 38 (8), 613-618. doi: 10.1080/j.1440-1614.2004.01429.x

What determines compulsory community treatment? A logistic regression analysis using linked mental health and offender databases

2004

Journal Article

A group intervention which assists patients with dual diagnosis reduce their drug use: a randomized controlled trial

James, W., Preston, N. J., Koh, G., Spencer, C., Kisely, S. R. and Castle, D. J. (2004). A group intervention which assists patients with dual diagnosis reduce their drug use: a randomized controlled trial. Psychological Medicine, 34 (6), 983-990. doi: 10.1017/S0033291703001648

A group intervention which assists patients with dual diagnosis reduce their drug use: a randomized controlled trial

2004

Journal Article

Impact of compulsory community treatment on admission rates: Survival analysis using linked mental health and offender databases

Kiseley, Stephen R., Xiao, Jianguo and Preston, Neil J. (2004). Impact of compulsory community treatment on admission rates: Survival analysis using linked mental health and offender databases. British Journal of Psychiatry, 184 (5), 432-438. doi: 10.1192/bjp.184.5.432

Impact of compulsory community treatment on admission rates: Survival analysis using linked mental health and offender databases

2004

Journal Article

Advice zone: Who do I contact about a job in Australia?

Kisely, Stephen (2004). Advice zone: Who do I contact about a job in Australia?. British Medical Journal, 328 (7436), 62b-62b.

Advice zone: Who do I contact about a job in Australia?

2004

Conference Publication

Mortality and psychiatric disorder: Comparing rates in specialist and primary care with those of the general population

Kisely, S. (2004). Mortality and psychiatric disorder: Comparing rates in specialist and primary care with those of the general population. 54th Annual Meeting of the Canadian Psychiatric Association, Montreal, Canada, 14-18 October, 2004.

Mortality and psychiatric disorder: Comparing rates in specialist and primary care with those of the general population

2004

Conference Publication

Counting the cost: The burden of depressive disorders

Kisely, S. (2004). Counting the cost: The burden of depressive disorders. 14th Nova Scotia Hospital Academic Day, Dartmouth, Canada, April 2004.

Counting the cost: The burden of depressive disorders

Funding

Current funding

  • 2023 - 2026
    Taking control: variations in forced psychiatric treatment in the community (ARC Discovery Project administered by La Trobe University)
    La Trobe University
    Open grant
  • 2023 - 2026
    Healing Spirit, Healing Minds: Co-designed healing program to promote social and emotional wellbeing of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander youth.
    NHMRC IDEAS Grants
    Open grant
  • 2022 - 2029
    Schizophrenia and Weight Improvement From Tirzepatide (SWIFT)
    NHMRC MRFF - Rare Cancers, Rare Diseases and Unmet Need
    Open grant
  • 2021 - 2026
    ALIVE - A National Research Translation Centre to implement Mental Health Care at Scale (NHMRC Special Initiative in Mental Health Grant, admin: UMelb)
    University of Melbourne
    Open grant
  • 2019 - 2025
    What is the impact of the National Bowel Cancer Screening Program on colorectal cancer outcomes for people over the age of 50 with severe mental illness?
    Cancer Council Australia
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2023 - 2024
    Indigenous Mental Health Model of Care: RCT based on a trans-diagnostic CBT program co-designed with Community (NHMRC Global Alliance for Chronic Diseases Grant led by UNSW)
    Open grant
  • 2022 - 2024
    A 40-year life course study of the effects of child maltreatment using linked birth cohort and administrative health data
    Metro South Health Research Support Scheme Project Grant
    Open grant
  • 2017 - 2023
    Indigenous Mental Health Model of Care: RCT based on a trans-diagnostic CBT program co-designed with Community
    NHMRC Global Alliance for Chronic Diseases Grant
    Open grant
  • 2015 - 2017
    Vaporising smoking-related harms in people with severe and persistent mental illness: A study of the acceptability of vaporised nicotine products for smoking cessation or long-term substitution
    Monash University
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2020
    Indigenous Network Suicide Intervention Skills Training (INSIST): Can a community designed and delivered framework reduce suicide/self-harm in Indigenous youth?
    NHMRC Mental Health Targeted Call for Research
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2018
    Evaluation of SCID-I in the diagnosis of mental disorders in Indigenous Australians
    NHMRC Project Grant
    Open grant
  • 2013 - 2016
    A MAP to better care: Applying the principles of advanced directives and motivational interviewing to discharge planning for psychiatric patients
    Australian Centre for Health Services Innovation
    Open grant
  • 2012 - 2015
    Improving the physical and oral health of people with severe mental illness: using Normalisation Process Theory to support new practices (ARC Linkage Project administered by Griffith University)
    Griffith University
    Open grant
  • 2012 - 2013
    The Queensland Drink Safe Precincts Initiative: proposed impact analysis and evaluation
    Queensland Department of the Premier and Cabinet
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2014
    Understanding the relationship between mental illness and offending: Implications for crime prevention and the management of mentally ill offenders (ARC Linkage Project administered by Griffith Univ.)
    Griffith University
    Open grant
  • 2010 - 2015
    NCRIS Research Capability known as 'Population Health Research Network' (PHRN) (NCRIS project administered by the University of Western Australia)
    University of Western Australia
    Open grant
  • 2010 - 2014
    Why are psychiatric patients more likely to die of cancer? An epidemiological study of cancer incidence & staging
    Cancer Council Queensland
    Open grant
  • 2009 - 2014
    National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS) - Capability 5.7 Population Health and Clinical Data Linkages (Population Health Research Network)
    National Collaborative Infrastructure Strategy - Queensland Government Contribution
    Open grant
  • 2009 - 2016
    A ten-year evaluation of community treatment orders on mental health outcomes
    Australian Rotary Health Research Fund
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor Steve Kisely is:
Available for supervision

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Available projects

  • Studying the long-tern consequences of child maltreatment in a population birth cohortt

    Retrospective studies show a strong association between self-reported child abuse and subsequent tobacco use. Prospective studies using reports to statutory agencies are less common with limited information on people in their 30s. In addition, there have been no comparison of the effect of self- and agency-reported abuse on outcomes. This research uses data from a longitudinal birth cohort study that was linked to notifications of child maltreatment (CM) to Queensland’s child protection agency, the Department of Families, Youth and Community Care (DFYCC) to study the psychological, physical and cognitive effects in adlulthood of CM

Supervision history

Current supervision

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

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