Fiona Wood (born February 2, 1958, Hernsworth, Yorkshire, England) is a British-born Australian plastic surgeon who invented “spray-on skin” technology for use in treating burn victims.
Wood was raised in a mining village in Yorkshire. Athletic as a youth, she had originally dreamed of becoming an Olympic sprinter before eventually setting her sights on a medical career. She graduated from St. Thomas’s Hospital Medical School in London in 1981 and worked for a time at a British hospital. Wood then proceeded to earn her primary fellowship (1983) and fellowship (1985) from the Royal College of Surgeons (RCS). She moved to Perth in 1987 after marrying surgeon Tony Keirath, a native of Western Australia. She became Western Australia’s first female plastic surgeon, after earning her fellowship from the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons (RACS) in plastic and reconstructive surgery (1991). In 1992 Wood became head of the burn unit at Royal Perth Hospital (RPH), which moved its facilities to Fiona Stanley Hospital in 2014. She also served as a clinical professor at the School of Paediatrics and Child Health at the University of Western Australia and directed the McComb Research Foundation (now the Fiona Wood Foundation), which she founded in 1999.
From the early 1990s Wood focused her research on improving established techniques of skin repair. Her spray-on skin repair technique involved taking a small patch of healthy skin from a burn victim and using it to grow new skin cells in a laboratory. The new cells were then sprayed onto the patient’s damaged skin. With traditional skin grafts, 21 days were necessary to grow enough cells to cover extensive burns. Using spray-on skin, Wood was able to lower that amount of time to just 5 days. Wood patented her technique and in 1999 cofounded a company, Clinical Cell Culture, to release the technology worldwide. The company went public in 2002, with much of the money it generated being used to fund further research. Her technique was considered a significant advance in clinical skin repair, helping to reduce scarring in patients with extensive burns and speed their rate of recovery. In October 2002, survivors of bombings in Bali, Indonesia, were evacuated to RPH, where Wood led a team that was credited with saving the lives of 28 of those patients, some of whom had suffered burns over more than 90 percent of their bodies. In March 2007 Wood also cared for several victims of an airplane crash at Yogyakarta Airport, in Indonesia.
Wood received the Order of Australia in 2003 for her work with the Bali bombing victims. In 2005 she was honoured as Australian of the Year.