Nicholas Fisk (academic)


Nicholas M. Fisk AM FAHMS FRCOG. FRSN is an Australian maternal-fetal medicine specialist, academic and researcher. As an obstetrician, Fisk is known for inventing the natural caesarean operation, also referred to as the family centred caesarean section. He has pioneered advances in understanding fetoplacental disease and its treatment, including characterising early human fetal stem cell populations, documenting “fetal pain” and its blockade by opioid analgesia, and unravelling the vascular basis of twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome. In 2016 he was appointed as Deputy Vice-Chancellor at the University of New South Wales.

Early life and career

Nicholas Fisk was educated at St Ignatius College Riverview, the University of Sydney, University College London and Imperial College London. Fisk was Professor of Obstetrics & Fetal Medicine at Queen Charlotte's Hospital and Imperial College London, where his laboratory and clinical research program achieved an international reputation in fetal diagnosis and treatment.
He returned to Australia in 2008 as the inaugural Director of the  at the University of Queensland, where between 2010-2016 he served as Executive Dean of the Faculties of Health, Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. From 2000-01 he was President of the  and from 2016-2019 Chair of the Association for  . He was elected to Fellowship of the Academy of Health and Medical Sciences in 2014. In 2020 he was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia for significant service to tertiary education, and to maternal-fetal medicine.

Expertise and advocacy

Fisk’s research area is human fetoplacental disease and its treatment, including fetal stem cells, fetal “pain", and monochorionic twins. In 2019 his group documented the likely genetic basis of semi-identical twins, with identical maternal DNA, but paternal DNA from different sperms. He has published over 300 research papers, and served on the editorial boards of PLoS Medicine and Human Reproduction. As an influential clinician, he is known for promoting the natural caesarean operation, and as an advocate for women’s right to choose their mode of delivery. His research on fetal pain has been used by both sides in the abortion debate.