
The ACMHN Conference Scientific Committee is established to oversee the design, planning, development and execution of the International Conference Program. The 2026 committee is chaired by Dr Brent Hayward. Brent, along with the Scientific Committee members, bring passion and commitment to their roles in delivering a high-quality conference program.
Dr Brent Hayward

Brent is a Credentialed Mental Health Nurse, a Registered Disability Practitioner, and Fellow of the ACMHN. He is the incoming Chair of the ACMHN Scientific Committee tasked with delivering the annual conference. He has worked in a variety of clinical, policy, and leadership roles in the mental health, disability, and government school sectors. His PhD explored the influences on positive behaviour support in the NDIS. He left the public sector for academia and is now a Senior Lecturer in the School of Nursing and Midwifery at Monash University. He teaches in the undergraduate nursing program, supervises postgraduate students, and researches school nursing, mental health nursing, and disability support policy.
Leigh Peterson
Credentialed MHN
Nurse Practitioner - Mental Health Liaison & Addiction Medicine
NP at NPathy
SA Branch Chair ACMHN
Dr Russell James

Dr Russell James is a mental health nurse and Senior Lecturer within the School of Nursing at the University of Tasmania, and President of Mental Health Friends and Families Tasmania, an advocacy organisation for supporters of individuals living with mental ill-health.
Dr Eric Lim

Eric is a Senior Lecturer and Academic Chair, Contemporary Mental Health at Murdoch University. He is a credentialed mental health nurse and a Fellow of the Australian College of Mental Health Nurses (ACMHN). Eric is also a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy. Eric is well-recognised by his peers for his contributions to mental health nursing and was appointed the inaugural Chair of the ACMHN Research Special Interest Group.
Eric has more than 20 years of experience in the field of mental health and is currently a Teaching and Research Academic. His clinical experiences and research highlight his ability to provide high-quality, recovery-focused care to individuals experiencing mental illnesses, trauma, and psychosocial stresses such as migration, cultural and linguistic discrimination, racism, and acculturation. He has established a national and international reputation for research in the field of mental health for vulnerable and underrepresented populations, including young people with mental illnesses and people from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds in Australia.
Adrienne Lipscomb

Ms Adrienne Lipscomb is a proud Wiradjuri and Ngemba woman and experienced mental health nurse with over 15 years working across remote, forensic, and child and adolescent settings. She is a lecturer at the University of Melbourne’s School of Health Sciences and an Aboriginal Senior Therapeutic Practitioner with the Victorian Aboriginal Child and Community Agency (VACCA) Aboriginal Children’s Healing Team. Adrienne holds a graduate certificate in Wiradjuri Language, Culture and Heritage, graduate diploma’s in Mental Health Nursing and Indigenous Trauma and Recovery Practice and is currently completing a Master of Indigenous Health. A Leaders in Indigenous Nursing and Midwifery Education Network (LINMEN) Advisory Group member, Adrienne brings expertise in trauma-informed, culturally responsive care across both clinical and educational environments.
Becky Hunston
Bios will be provided soon
Prof Rhonda Wilson

Professor Rhonda Wilson is an internationally recognised mental health nursing scientist with a research focus on digital health interventions. She is Professor of Nursing in the Nursing and Midwifery School, at University of Newcastle where she leads the largest Master of Mental Health Nursing program in Australia with 1000 students enrolled, generating 400 graduates per year. Rhonda leads an innovative digital mental health nursing laboratory, supervising 12 PhD students. She is a Registered Nurse and a Credentialed Mental Health Nurse and has worked across various roles as a clinical nurse, researcher and academic in Australia, Denmark and New Zealand over the past 35 years.
As a Wiradjuri descendent, she is a vigorous advocate for the promotion of cultural safety and decolonisation in our education and health institutions.
Prof Wendy Cross

Emeritus Professor Wendy Cross Wendy has many years’ experience as clinician, academic and applied researcher (and Principal Investigator) with a focus on mental health, health services evaluation and workforce. She has developed clinical best practices and workplace training extensively focused on public health services. She has received a combined total of $11 million in research and teaching grants, has more than 200 publications across all domains (H-Index 39), has supervised multiple research candidates to successful completions and is regularly sought after for thesis examination. She reviews for a variety of health-related peer reviewed journals.
Wendy is a long-standing academic and has held senior appointments across Australia and was the previous Deputy Vice Chancellor, Academic at Federation University, Australia. Wendy holds a number of honorary professorial appointments. Currently she is a TEQSA expert; Chair of the Australian Osteopathic Accreditation Council (AOAC) and the previous Chair of the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Accreditation Council (ANMAC). She holds numerous board director positions as well as participating in multiple national committees in health and education. In 2017, she was appointed as a National Mental Health Commissioner in Australia for a two-year term
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Over many years Wendy has provided unconditional support via clinical supervision, for many nurses, including those who are in non-mental-health nursing specialties. She is a very proud mental health nurse and life fellow of the college.
ACMHN 2026 Destination Partner
