Background
Stewart was born in North Sydney, Nova Scotia, to father Donald and mother Edith, and raised in Sydney Mines.
Stewart was born in North Sydney, Nova Scotia, to father Donald and mother Edith, and raised in Sydney Mines.
Stewart graduated with his Bachelor and Bachelor of Science from Acadia University, and from Dalhousie University in 1970 with his medical degree.
He represented the electoral district of Cape Breton North in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly from 1993 to 1997. During his time as an intern at the Victoria General Hospital he was heavily influenced by his professor and head of Emergency Medicine Doctor Bob Scharf. Upon graduation, he began his medical career by taking up a rural practice in Neil"s Harbour, Nova Scotia.
In 1972, after two years in Cape Breton, Stewart entered the residency program in Emergency Medicine at the University of Southern California.
He was the first medical director in the Los Angeles paramedic program In Los Angeles, Stewart treated patients like Charles Manson.
While working in Los Angeles he was also hired as a consultant for the television shows Emergency! and Marcus Welby, Doctor of Medicine In 1978, he left California for Pennsylvania, where he served as the founding head of the emergency medicine department at the University of Pittsburgh. He was appointed medical director for the Department of Public Safety of Pittsburgh, where he was known as "Doctor Emergency".
In 1988, Stewart returned to Canada, first to the University of Toronto and then to Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, to teach and establish a pain and trauma research laboratory
Stewart served as the chairman for study of health reform in United States, which advised Bill Clinton, that looked at one phase of ambulatory care and the training standards with regards to emergency care. Stewart entered provincial politics in the 1993 election, defeating Progressive Conservative cabinet minister Brian Young by over 1500 votes in the Cape Breton North riding.
In June 1993, Stewart was appointed to the Executive Council of Nova Scotia as Minister of Health. Stewart commissioned several reports on health care reform.
Based on these reports, a reform of Nova Scotia"s health care system was started in 1994, with the provincial government taking over control of ground ambulance operations and consolidating them into a single entity called Emergency Health Services.
Stewart resigned from cabinet on June 27, 1996, and was replaced by Bernie Boudreau. On September 15, 1997, Stewart resigned as Modern Language Association, opening up a seat for premier Russell MacLellan to run in a byelection. Stewart founded the Music-in-Medicine program at Dalhousie Medical School, which is part of their Medical Humanities Program.
In 1993, Stewart was named an Officer of the Order of Canada. In 2006, he was named a Member of the Order of Nova Scotia. In 2008, Stewart was named a Hero of Emergency Medicine by the American College of Emergency Physicians. Stewart has also received honorary doctorates from Acadia University (Doctor of Science-1989) and Cape Breton University (Doctor of Laws-2010).
He was a member of the Nova Scotia Liberal Party. Stewart is also a founding member of the Nova Scotia Paramedic Society. In 2006, he was named a Member of the Order of Nova Scotia.