Our Board of Directors
Meet our Board
Our President
Professor Jonathan Morris
Learn about me
Professor Jonathan Morris has over 20 years of experience in caring for women with a high-risk pregnancy. He has expertise in the management of medical conditions that may affect women’s pregnancies as well as the management and prevention of preterm birth, fetal growth problems and high blood pressure in pregnancy. Jonathan is a graduate of the University of Edinburgh and completed his Obstetric and Maternal Fetal Medicine sub specialty training in Sydney. He completed his PhD in Oxford and returned to Sydney in 1998 to the Royal North Shore Hospital. Jonathan has a long history of active involvement in research and has led a number of large clinical trials that have informed practice in Australia and overseas. His major research interests are the prediction, prevention and management of pregnancy complications. Following research which highlighted the crucial growth and development in the last few weeks fo pregnancy, Jonathan founded the ‘Every Week Counts’ campaign to raise awareness among both clinicians and expectant parents of the short, medium and long term implications of being born earlier than 39 completed weeks of gestation.
He is an Investigator with the Stillbirth CRE and Vice President of the Australian Preterm Birth Prevention Alliance.
Our Vice President
Professor Adrienne Gordon
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Adrienne is a senior staff specialist Neonatologist in the RPA centre for newborn care and Clinical Professor in the Disciplines of Obstetrics, Gynaecology and Neonatology and Child and Adolescent Health, at Central and the Children’s Hospital at Westmead Clinical Schools, within the Faculty of Medicine and Health at the University of Sydney.
She trained in paediatrics prior to specialising in neonatal/perinatal medicine and is passionate about the public health impact of a healthy start to life and preventing adverse pregnancy outcome especially stillbirth. She is a Chief Investigator on the NHMRC Stillbirth Centre of Research Excellence, a Board Member of the Perinatal Society of Australia and New Zealand and active member of the IMPACT Network (Improving Maternal and Perinatal Outcomes – Action through Clinical Trials).
She has strong links with National parent led organisations – including Stillbirth and Preterm Birth Advocacy Groups both and is Deputy Chair of the National RedNose (Previously SIDSandKIDS) scientific advisory group. Adrienne currently leads the Public Awareness work within the Stillbirth Centre of Research Excellence which includes mass media campaign design and evaluation in collaboration with Prof Adrian Bauman from the University of Sydney. She is a key member of the Safer Baby Bundle initiative which aims to reduce late pregnancy stillbirth in Australia by 20% and a board member of the International Stillbirth Alliance. Adrienne is committed to multidisciplinary research and leads the BABY1000 project at the Charles Perkins Centre, University of Sydney which aims to determine the modifiable risks and interventions prior to and during pregnancy that impact on obesity, diabetes and later life health.
Our Board Members
Jeffrey Williams
Executive Director,
Women & Newborn Health Service,
North Metropolitan Health Service, WA
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Jeffrey is a strategic and clinical Non-Executive Director with a strong focus on results, culture, and high-quality service delivery across public and private health sectors. A Registered Nurse by background, he brings extensive experience in health service management and governance, with a proven ability to implement systems and policies that enhance patient safety and experience.
Jeffrey currently serves as Executive Director of Women’s & Newborn Health Service at North Metropolitan Health Services and holds Non-Executive Director roles at St John WA and MercyCare. He is a Graduate of the Australian Institute of Company Directors and a Fellow of the Australasian College of Health Service Management.
Jeffrey’s career reflects a deep commitment to improving healthcare outcomes through strategic, operational, and project leadership. He continues to influence the
sector through governance roles and professional contributions that drive innovation
and excellence in service delivery.
Kate Reynolds
Coordinator of Midwifery
WA Country Health Service, WA
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Kate Reynolds, with 31 years experience as a midwife (and 37 years as a nurse) in WA tertiary, private, remote and regional maternity services with a passion for innovative models of maternity care and translating evidence into country maternity care practice.
Kate was previously manager of Maternity and Paediatrics at Bunbury for 6 years before setting up the Midwifery Group Practice. Kate is currently the Coordinator of Midwifery for WA Country Health Services, the largest health service in Australia, working in close partnership with the Clinical Head for Obstetrics, the Midwifery Advisory Forum and the Obstetric leadership to drive and standardise evidenced based policy and practice changes across WACHS whilst maintaining vigilance related to the safety and quality of maternity care.
Kate is able to influence at high levels for change in each of her roles including as WACHS Program Manager for the CHI Maternity Service Improvement program, as an executive member of the WA Health Clinical Senate and as Co-Lead of the WA Health Women and Newborn Health Network (WNHN). Kate is motivated by ensuring all country women and their families have access to safe, efficient and contemporary models of maternity care across the full continuum regardless of distance and where they give birth, including Aboriginal women.
Louise Keyes
Director of Midwifery for Centenary Hospital
Canberra Health Service
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Louise is the current Director of Midwifery for Centenary Hospital, Canberra Health Service. She has been a nurse and a midwife for 29 years working for both private and public healthcare services and has travelled internationally, interstate and to rural and remote areas to represent these services. Louise is a Fellow of the Australian College of Midwives (ACM) and has held the position of National Director, Council Member and Branch chair (Western Australia) for the college. Louise played a lead role in the national unification of the ACM and was instrumental in establishing Midwifery Group Practices and a graduate research internship at Women and Newborn Health Service in Western Australia.
Louise was also the Women and Newborn Health Service (WNHS) midwife representative for Perinatal Society of Australia and New Zealand (PSANZ) and was a member of the West Australian Perinatal Mortality Meeting for ten years.
During her time as Nurse Midwife Co-Ordinator at Armadale Health Service in Western Australia she was a member of the National Preterm Birth Alliance team; implemented a Maternal Antenatal and Postnatal Service (MAPS) for women having an Aboriginal baby and led the Infection Prevention and Management team during the COVID pandemic and over saw several patient flow improvement strategies.
In undertaking a broad range of strategic, leadership, operational, management, clinical and education roles Louise has developed into a values-based leader within the multidisciplinary team. She has implemented many recommendations from various inquiries and reports leading her to achieve outstanding results in complex and challenging environments and has a track record meeting deadlines and in empowering and motivating staff at all levels to achieve. She is strong advocate for the continuous improvement of all aspects of woman/person centred care within healthcare services and the community.
A/Prof Mike Beckmann
Director Mother's Babies and Women's Health, Mater Mothers' Hospital
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Associate Professor Mike Beckmann MBBS, PhD, CHIA, AFAIDH, FRANZCOG is Head of Mother Babies and Women’s Health at Mater and oversees Australia’s largest women’s health service with more than 12,000 births annually across 5 Facilities. He also holds the position of Chief Digital Health Officer for the Mater Group.
Mike is an obstetrician and gynaecologist, health informatician, and health services researcher with more than 70 research publications, and is currently supervising PhD students in the areas of minimizing clinical variation, team dynamics, and consumer information-sharing.
As a clinician, researcher and healthcare leader, Mike has led many innovations in healthcare delivery to improve safety and the quality of care, improve efficient, enhance patient experience as we as improve the work-life of staff
Nicole Carlon
Divisional Director for Women’s and Children’s Services at Northern Health
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A nurse and midwife, Nicole Carlon is currently serving as the Divisional Director for Women’s and Children’s Services at Northern Health, holding a pivotal role in the provision of safe, high-quality patient care. A driving force for positive change, Nicole is an advocate for improved healthcare culture and practices, evident in her active involvement in the Maternity and Newborn Learning Health Network for Safer Care Victoria. She also has a special interest in digital health innovation and was central in the development of the ‘EVE’ maternity app and ‘SMART IOL’ booking platform.
Rachael Yates
Executive Director, Nursing and Midwifery
Women's and Children's Health Network (WCHN)
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Rachael Yates was appointed Executive Director, Nursing and Midwifery in September 2022 at the Women’s and Children’s Health Network (WCHN). Rachael is the professional lead for nursing and midwifery across WCHN. Rachael has held senior leadership and management experience in regional and metropolitan services, including the deputy Chief Nurse and Midwifery Officer for South Australia in 2021/22, a well-respected leader in the nursing and midwifery profession in South Australia. She has had significant experience in change management and in collaborative design and development of health service delivery, including influencing future strategic and operational opportunity for the networks and the nursing and midwifery workforce. Rachael is committed to contemporary nursing and midwifery practice and evidence informed models of care.
A/Prof Tanya Farrell
Deputy Executive Director Nursing and Midwifery,
Western Health, VIC
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Tanya is a midwife and a nurse with extensive professional and operational management and leadership experience within maternity services and has a proven track record of improving the care of women and babies, at a local, state and national level.
Her current role at Western Health is accountable for leading woman-centred care cultural change. The role engages with the operational management teams to provide professional midwifery and nursing leadership and operational advice to support the achievement of organisational priorities while ensuring the delivery of an evidenced based, contemporary maternity service. This role also takes a lead role in strategic planning and service development across the continuum of maternity care
As the organisation’s most senior midwife, the role also provides professional leadership and accountability for midwifery clinical standards, clinical practice, quality and safety requirements through appropriate midwifery staffing and skill mix, clinical competence, credentialing and evidence-based standards of practice.
Prior to her role at Western Health Tanya worked at Safer Care Victoria (SCV), where she was the Senior Maternity Adviser. During this period Tanya also spent a significant time as the Acting Chief Nursing and Midwifery Officer for Victoria. Tanya joined Western Health with a desire to move closer to where care is provided to support and lead a maternity service and its midwives and nurses during a time of rapid growth and reform.
Tanya is the immediate past Chair of Victoria’s Consultative Council on Obstetric and Paediatric Mortality and Morbidity (CCOPMM) and is the first midwife to hold this role in the council’s 70-year history.
Tanya has also been the Executive Director of Midwifery and Nursing at the Royal Women’s Hospital.
Tanya is also an Adjunct Professor in Nursing and Midwifery at La Trobe University and at Deakin University and was awarded an Honorary Doctorate in Public Health by La Trobe University in 2022.