Merging two paths of knowledge in healing
After graduating from the University of Western Australia, Helen spent the next few years as a general practitioner and consultant in childhood sexual abuse at Princess Margaret Hospital for Children. Both experiences opened her eyes to the lack of understanding of trauma in children and especially of the generational trauma felt by Indigenous children.
In the 25 years that have passed since then, she has pioneered research, education and training in Aboriginal and child mental health, and recovery from grief and trauma.
She has also played key roles on numerous mental health advisory committees and boards, including the National Mental Health Commission. In 2018, the AFL made history by appointing her as its first Indigenous Commissioner. This also made her the third woman on its governing body.
Yet she bats away any praise of her ambition.
“I was a fairly determined kid who just kept going,” she laughs. “I didn't have a plan. I didn't set out to do certain things - they happened along the way. Each time an issue came up that interested me, the path would unravel a little more.
“As a young doctor, I saw things I thought should change or be improved. When you've grown up in an Aboriginal family and see the huge burden the community carries, it compels you to try harder to make a difference.”
While pulling shifts in the Child Protection Unit in the Children’s Hospital, Helen quickly realised that there weren’t any models of recovery for Indigenous communities at the time. That’s when her career path unfurled a little more.
“I decided to make Child and Adolescent Psychiatry my field of specialty,” she says. “I've always had an interest in kids and people's stories, and I wanted to work with trauma and cultural models to see if I could make a difference in this area.
“I started learning about the meaning of health and healing from an Indigenous perspective, and the meaning of illness and symptoms from a psychiatric perspective. Then I developed training courses, a curriculum and models of understanding that combined Indigenous knowledge with Western science to get us the best outcomes.”
One of Helen’s most profound experiences was during her five years as commissioner for the Australian government's Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse from 2013. She describes it as “intense, inspiring and disturbing.”
While she expresses hope that the Commission’s work has made Australia a safer place for children, she also voices frustration at the severe underinvestment in long-term services to support children’s mental health, especially in rural and regional communities.
In October 2020, Helen was named WA 2021 Australian of the Year for her trailblazing work in this space. Helen says she was both shocked and humbled by the privilege of having her career recognised in this way.