The Royal North Shore Hospital’s Department of Hand and Peripheral Nerve Surgery has a clinical and research focus. It provides high level care to patients with complex hand and peripheral nerve problems, while also advancing the science of the speciality through clinical and basic scientific research.
With an emphasis on clinically relevant topics, the department undertakes surgical outcome reviews, surgical technique developments, multi-centre international trials, comparative anatomy studies, and publishes case reports.
Our team has specialised clinical interests in congenital hand anomalies, brachial plexus injuries, tetraplegia and spasticity, and therefore much of the research undertaken focuses on these areas. Our work and research in these fields is recognised worldwide, with Professor Michael Tonkin and Dr Claudia Gschwind regularly invited to present findings at international congresses.
In a career focused on congenital hand surgery and its associated research, Professor Tonkin co-developed the internationally used eponymous Oberg Manske Tonkin Classification of Congenital Anomalies of the Hand and Upper Limb. This system now provides the basis of many research projects worldwide in congenital hand surgery.
Hand Surgery related information
As well as the 150+ international and local fellows that the Department has trained since the 1980s, the department also regularly hosts Visiting Professors and welcomes observers from hand surgery units nationally and internationally. Each participates in research, through involvement at RNSH or by delivering presentations of their work undertaken at their home institutions.
Drs Michael Tonkin, Richard Lawson, David Stewart and Anthony Beard have participated in annual hand surgery missions to deliver surgical services to developing areas and provide an educational program to these local surgeons. These include annual visits to Vietnam and Cambodia under Rotary and Orthopaedic Outreach programs respectively, as well as to China. The Department consultants hold positions in international, national and state hand surgery groups, and are involved in the scientific programming of the congresses held annually.
Regular specialised educational courses are also organised at Royal North Shore Hospital by the department with invited lecturers, including the Australian Hand Surgery Society Hand and Forearm Flap Course and the Australian Hand Surgery Brachial Plexus Dissection Course. These courses provide experience to many national and international hand surgeons and continue to provide inspiration for research.
More information can be found on the department website www.rnshhand.org
Research projects are run in collaboration with:
- RNSH departments, including physiotherapy, orthopaedic and traumatic surgery, the Spinal Injuries Unit and the Multi-Disciplinary Spasticity Clinic
- The Kolling Institute, including the Murray Maxwell Biomechanics Research Laboratory, the Sutton Laboratories and the Sydney Clinical Skills and Simulation Centre
- The Children’s Hospital at Westmead
- North Shore Private Hospital
- University of Sydney’s Master of Surgery and Master of Philosophy programs
- Taronga Zoo
- International hospitals and universities, such as the ERASMUS Medical Centre in Rotterdam, Netherlands and the Loma Linda University, California, USA.











