Helen Christensen

Scientia Professor Helen Christensen (AO) is Director & Chief Scientist at the Black Dog Institute and a Professor of Mental Health at UNSW Sydney. She is Chief Investigator for the  Centre for Research Excellence in Suicide Prevention, National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), Elizabeth Blackman Fellow in Public Health, Board Member for the Association of Australian Medical Research Institutes (AAMRI), and previously one of only two NHMRC John Cade Research Fellows. She is also on the Million Minds panel, a government initiative that has brought together the distinguished academics and mental health professionals to reduce the prevalence of mental illness and suicide.  

Scientia Professor

Helen Christensen AO

BA (Hons)(Syd), MPsychol (Hons), PhD (UNSW), FASSA, FAHMS, MAICD | NHMRC Elizabeth Blackburn Fellow, MAPS
Education• 1988 PhD, UNSW Sydney (Part Time)

• 1982 Master of Psychology (Honours, 1st Place), UNSW Sydney (Part Time)

• 1977 Bachelor of Arts (Honours), University of Sydney (Full Time)
OccupationChief Scientist & Director
OrganizationBlack Dog Institute
Known forWork in: Public Health; Mental Health; Suicide; Prevention and early intervention; Technology and e-health.
PredecessorProfessor Gordon Parker AO
Websitewww.blackdoginstitute.org.au

Christensen’s areas of interest include:

  • evaluation of internet applications/ online programs for the prevention and treatment of mental disorders;
  • quality of digital interventions;
  • integration of new technologies into health care;
  • development of evidence-informed policy; and
  • methods to measure impact and dissemination.  

Christensen is highly recognised as an international authority in depression and suicide prevention, most well known for her pioneering work in harnessing technologies in mental health. She has published more than 600 peer-reviewed research articles, including more than 180 in the last five years. With over 54,200 citations on Google Scholar to date, h index of 129 (Google), over 150 papers cited 100 times, and eight cited more than 500 times, she is an ISI Highly Cited Researcher. Her contributions in the last five years has been characterised by the capacity to complete and implement large-scale population-based digital, clinical step-care and community intervention trials and the establishment of a digital mental health research program. She is interested in digital phenotyping and the use of AI in developing faster treatments for mental health problems.

As a leading expert on using technology to deliver evidence-based interventions for the prevention and treatment of depression, anxiety, suicide, and self-harm. Christensen has contributed significantly to the prevention of mental health problems in young people through school-based research programs. These programs mostly used websites and apps  to prevent depression and suicide risk.  

Christensen’s lifetime of research and service has been to improve and reform mental healthcare delivery and prevent the human and economic cost of mental ill-health on communities.  

Honours and Awards

List of Honours

Awards

Christensen has won 19 national and international awards and six prizes. She has achieved the highest research award from both her professional body (The Australian Psychological Society) and the peak research body in mental health (The Society for Mental Health Research). She is the recipient of two recent awards for leadership: NSW Premier’s Prize for Leadership in Innovation (2016), and the International Society for Research on Internet Interventions Lifetime Achievement Award (2019). She was conferred an Officer (AO) in the General Division of the Order of Australia in the 2019 Australia Day Honours List for her distinguished service to medical research.  

Appointments

  • Former president Australasian Society for Psychiatric Research (ASPR) 2009-2011, which is the peak body for mental health research in Australia.  
  • Former President, International Society for Research into Internet Interventions (ISRII) 2009-2011, a 400-member society which promotes research into Internet applications.  
  • She has been a member of 13 Executive Committees, Government panels and committees, 12 NHMRC Panels since 2001 including project, scholarship and training awards, and Chair/ member of the Victorian Centre of Excellence in Depression Research Grant Applications for 4 years.  
  • She has been a Director of the Australian Foundation for Mental Health Research, and was the chair of the organising committee that established the organisation in 2003.  
  • She was Director, Centre for Mental Health Research, Australian National University. Co-Director, E-hub, Centre for Mental Health Research, Australian National University (till 2011).  
  • Executive Board, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, Australian National University (till 2009).  
  • Member, College of Medicine and Health Sciences Advisory Committee, ANU. Chair, University Promotions Committee for NCEPH and CMHR (till 2009), ANU.  
  • University Promotions Committee (Level E) ANU 2006-2008.  
  • Chancellor's Awards Committee 2007+. Member, Staff Structures Working Party 2007-2009.  
  • Member of ANU Equity and Diversity Committee (2004-2006).
  • Chair or co-chair of 6 national or international meetings since 2001.  
  • Services to eight other organisations including Member of the Ethics Committee Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.  
  • Member, Research Committee, Orygen Research Centre, University of Melbourne, and the research committee of the Mental Health Council of Australia.  

Teaching and Mentoring

Supervision of over 30 PhD students since 2004. CIA on NHMRC Capacity Building Grant 2007. Substantial mentoring of PhDs and Post Docs since 1999. Introduction of mentoring/leadership training to the Centre for Mental Health Research at the ANU.  

Papers and Citations

gollark: Exciting news: the achievement system is now better and probably without race conditions.
gollark: .
gollark: That something is amiss
gollark: USB 3 *hubs* contain a USB 2 hub so they can still handle USB 2 devices, so you're limited to USB 2 bandwidth on the link back to the host.
gollark: USB 3 ports have to include separate USB 2 hardware connected to separate wires and everything to maintain backward compatibility.
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