Western Australia's only female plastic surgeon is a mother of six, Head of
Royal Perth Hospital's Burns Unit and Director of the Western Australia Burns
Service. She is also co-founder of Clinical Cell Culture, a private company
recognised in medical circles for its world-leading research and breakthroughs
in the treatment of burns.
In addition, Dr. Fiona Wood is also a Clinical Professor with the School of
Paediatrics and Child Health at the University of Western Australia and
Director of the McComb Research Foundation.
She has become world renowned for her patented invention of spray on skin for
burns victims, a treatment which is continually developing. Where previous
techniques of skin culturing required 21 days to produce enough cells to cover
major burns, Fiona has reduced that period to five days.
Via her research, Fiona found that scarring is greatly reduced if replacement
skin could be provided within 10 days. As a burns specialist the holy grail for
Dr Fiona Wood is 'scarless woundless healing'.
A graduate of St Thomas's Hospital Medical School in London, Fiona worked at a
major British hospital before marrying Western Australian born surgeon Tony
Keirath and migrating to Perth with their first two children in 1987. She
completed her training in plastic surgery between having four more children.
In October 2002, Fiona was propelled into the media spotlight when the largest
proportion of survivors from the Bali bombings arrived at Royal Perth Hospital.
She led a courageous and committed team in the fight to save 28 patients
suffering from between two and 92 per cent body burns, deadly infections and
delayed shock.
Her exceptional leadership and surgical skills and the fact that she had the
vision to plan for a large-scale disaster five years before the Bali tragedy,
brought world-wide praise and recognition to the Royal Perth Hospital Burns
Unit and highlighted the ground breaking research into burns treatment taking
place in Western Australia.
Although Fiona came into the public eye following Bali, she has been well known
and respected in her field of burns internationally and locally for many years.
Her business, Clinical Cell Culture, came about after a schoolteacher arrived
at Royal Perth Hospital in 1992 with petrol burns to 90% of his body. Fiona
turned to the emerging US-invented technology of cultured skin to save his
life, working nights in a laboratory borrowed from scientist Marie Stoner. A
friendship developed, and the two women joined forces to explore tissue
engineering. They moved from growing skin sheets to spraying skin cells;
earning a world-wide reputation as pioneers in their field. The company started
operating in 1993 and is now planning to release its technology globally to use
the royalties to fund further burns research.
Through her enthusiasm, innovation and vision, Fiona has saved and improved
countless people's lives and has inspired a nation.