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This profile was automatically generated using 6 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 6 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 6 references Web References
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1. www.joeys.org
www.joeys.org/newspublications - [Cached]Published on: 5/1/2008 Last Visited: 6/21/2008
The college community was addressed by Lieutenant Colonel Dr Michael Campion (70), a remarkable Old Boy who has made significant contributions across the world in his role as consultant surgeon to the Australian Defence Force.Lieutenant Colonel Campion has been deployed to Rwanda, Bougainville, Solomon Islands, East Timor, Banda Aceh, Iraq and Afghanistan.He is a Gynecological Oncologist at the Royal Hospital for Women and is also active in Ophthalmic Surgery.
Lieutenant Colonel Campion shared his thoughts about the meaning of ANZAC Day and spoke about the experiences of the very first ANZACs in Gallipoli.
"ANZAC Day is not only about loss.It is about courage, duty, endurance, love of country, mateship, having a sense of worth and knowing that we can all do something, no matter how small, to better our world," he said. -
2. 2004 Annual Conference Presentations: WHA Tuesday Session 1
www.wcha.asn.au/WHACHAPublic/P - [Cached]Published on: 12/1/2006 Last Visited: 4/20/2007
Dr Michael Campion, Staff Specialist Pre Invasive Disease Unit, Royal Hospital for Women, Randwick, NSW -
3. CircInfo.org
www.circinfo.org/cervical.html - [Cached]Published on: 5/14/2002 Last Visited: 2/10/2008
Michael Campion, a staff specialist in pre-invasive disease at the Royal Hospital for Women, said women should not rely on circumcision to protect their health. "An individual man could have had only one other partner, but the woman inherits the whole history [of the previous partner] ... it really doesn't matter whether men are circumcised or not - women need regular pap smears and that's the end of the story." Dr Campion said the majority of women contract HPV at some time in their lives but fight it off successfully through their own natural immune response before it can damage the cells of the cervix.

