About Prof Paul Smith AM

Professor Smith’s main areas of clinical interest include hip and knee replacement surgery, knee reconstruction, joint preservation surgery of the hip and knee, and complex revision joint replacement surgery. In the trauma field Professor Smith’s major interest is pelvic and acetabular fracture reconstruction and he has performed over 600 pelvic reconstruction procedures.

Professor Smith has a major commitment to the ACT community through his role as chair of the John James Memorial Foundation (JJMF), the ACT regions largest health and medical charitable foundation. The JJMF supports Canberra health charities through its program of annual community grants totalling almost $500,000 each year, and provides scholarships for indigenous students at the ANU Medical School . The Foundation also undertakes major health infrastructure projects, most notably the John James Village in Garran. In 2020 the JJMF will build an early intervention centre for autism in partnership with the AEIOU Foundation.

Focussed on improving orthopaedic care in Australia, and globally.
— Prof Paul Smith AM

Professor Smith is widely recognised as a nationally leading orthopaedic researcher with over 160 peer reviewed publications and more than 100 conference presentations. He is a regular speaker at national and international meetings.

He has supervised over 15 MPhil and PhD students in their higher degree studies. In the field of knee research alone Professor Smith has published over 40 papers.

Professor Smith is the only Australian surgeon to have been awarded prestigious The Knee Society Insall Fellowship, receiving this fellowship award in recognition of his research in the area of knee kinematics. In 2016 Professor Smith established the Canberra Orthopaedic Research and Education (CORE) Foundation to provide support for research in orthopaedic surgery in the ACT. Professor Smith was awarded Fellowship of the Australian Orthopaedic Association (AOA) Research Foundation in 2018 and received the AOA Award for Orthopaedic Research in 2019.