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Contact Details

Email
andrew.mccombie@cdhb.health.nz
Position
Honorary Senior Research Fellow
Department
Department of Surgery and Critical Care (Christchurch)
Qualifications
BSc BA(Hons)(Cant) PhD(Otago)
Research summary
Inflammatory bowel disease and bowel cancer

Research

Dr Andrew McCombie works in the Department of Surgery on various projects in inflammatory bowel disease and bowel cancer. He is a Research Officer and Data Analyst for Te Whatu Ora | Health New Zealand and Honorary Senior Research Fellow for the University of Otago, Christchurch.

Andrew has previously completed a long term follow up of ileal pouch surgeries performed in Canterbury in the past two decades from which two papers were published. He and Associate Professor Tim Eglinton translated the information from this study into a patient information brochure for ulcerative colitis patients considering ileal pouch surgery.

In addition to supervising and advising on numerous projects, Andrew is also presently driving studies about quality of life (10Ten Study) and mindfulness (CALM Study) in the domain of bowel cancer. He is also driving a project in predictors of posttraumatic stress disorder, anxiety, and depression in major trauma patients who present to Christchurch Hospital.

Andrew has also driven projects in questionnaire validation, patient education resources, and smartphone app development.

Outside the academic environment, Andrew assists in the use of Scope and Cortex at Christchurch Hospital.

Andrew can assist with study design, study protocol writing, funding applications, navigating Māori consultation and ethics committee processes, basic-to-medium level statistics, data collection and extraction, and preparing papers for publication.

In 2014 Andrew completed his PhD in the psychological aspects of inflammatory bowel disease.

He has previously been a board member for Crohn’s and Colitis New Zealand and presently sits on the Executive for The New Zealand Society of Gastroenterology.

Research interests

  • Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD; Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis)
  • Bowel cancer
  • Psychology
  • Quality of Life
  • Psychological distress, depression, and anxiety
  • Smartphone apps (IBDsmart and IBDoc)
  • Patient education and translation of technical medical information
  • Computerised psychological interventions
  • Questionnaire writing and validation
  • Online questionnaire building
  • Randomized controlled trials
  • Systematic reviews (smartphone apps for IBD; computerised cognitive behavioural therapy for physical illnesses; coping strategies of IBD patients; psychotherapy for IBD)
  • Traumatic injury
  • Study design
  • Publications

    Logan, S., Finlayson, D., Quinn, N., Jemberie, D., Joyce, L. R., McCombie, A., & Wakeman, C. (2026). Left behind after impact: The hidden toll of trauma recovery in New Zealand. ANZ Journal of Surgery. Advance online publication. doi: 10.1111/ans.70722 Journal - Research Article

    Nonis, M., McCombie, A., Wakeman, C., Geddes, J., & Joyce, L. R. (2026). The effect of increasing age on outcomes in major trauma: A retrospective cohort study. Emergency Medicine Australasia, 38, e70226. doi: 10.1111/1742-6723.70226 Journal - Research Article

    Quinn, N., McCombie, A., Jemberie, D., Logan, S., Finlayson, D., Joyce, L. R., Mulder, R., Jordan, J., & Wakeman, C. (2026). Under-diagnosis and under-treatment of post traumatic stress disorder amongst major trauma patients. Injury, 57(5), 113077. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2026.113077 Journal - Research Article

    Macgregor, A., McCombie, A., Hall, E., & Kennedy, R. R. (2026). Effect of ethnicity and parity on utilisation of labour epidural analgesia: A retrospective study. Anaesthesia, 81(6), 792-800. doi: 10.1111/anae.70127 Journal - Research Article

    Kennedy, R. R., McCombie, A., & French, R. A. (2026). Maintaining lower fresh gas flows when using sevoflurane: An observational exploration of data from a single center. Anesthesiology, 144(3), 732-734. doi: 10.1097/aln.0000000000005867 Journal - Research Other

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