Clinical workshop : Emergency Medicine Skills stations : for Students | Dr Michael Catchpole; Dr Rod Martin; Dr Mike Eaton; Dr Louis Peachey; Dr Ted Chamberlain. (2 hours)
Tracks
Element
Saturday, October 21, 2017 |
10:30 AM - 12:30 PM |
Element |
Overview
Student participants will rotate through various Emergency Medicine "stations" for hands-on supervised tutoring. Experienced ACRRM Clinical workshop trainers will guide student participants through various scenarios, using relevant simulation equipment.
Speaker
Dr Michael Catchpole
ACRRM Trainer
Emergency Medicine Skills
Biography
Michael trained as a generalist in the days when this was easy to do informally. Has been Medical superintendent in Mount Morgan, a generalist in Redcliffe emergency department, Deputy Medical Superintendent at Redcliffe, Medical Superintendent at Mater Adult Brisbane (one year locum), Principal Medical Advisor Queensland Health (drafted the generalist training programme with Denis Lennox) and, after a year of retraining at Redcliffe, became an RFDS medical officer in Rockhampton and then Mount Isa.
After ten years with RFDS, retired due to eye and knee problems but remains keen to try to pass on some of the things he has learnt that he wishes someone had taught him 30 years ago.
Dr Theodore Chamberlain
Senior Medical Superintendent
Maleny Soldiers Memorial Hospital
Trainer : Emergency Medicine Skills
Biography
Dr Theodore Chamberlain is an overseas born Australian trained rural practitioner of over thirty years standing. Dr Chamberlain currently works as a Senior Medical Superintendent at the Maleny Soldiers Memorial Hospital which is a rural hospital servicing the township of Maleny in the hinterlands of the sunshine coast north of Brisbane in Queensland.
Dr Chamberlain completed his medical education at the University of Queensland and has practiced continually in rural medicine since then including over thirteen years with Dr Col Owen in Inglewood. He is a Fellow of ACRRM and has contributed to the rural health movement through involvement with ACRRM and RDAQ. He has had a long interest in telehealth having presented at the first National Rural Health Conference at Toowoomba on this subject in the late eighties.
Currently he is interested in expanding the role of rural hospitals to fill the needs of their communities and to this end has integrated a rehabilitation unit,palliative care unit and a movement disorders clinic specialising in end stage Parkinsonism into a rural hospital to reverse the flow from tertiary centres and to provide a service the community.
Dr Mike Eaton
ACRRM Trainer
Emergency Medicine Skills (Students)
Biography
Dr Mike Eaton is a FACRRM, GP Obstetrician in Rural Western Australia
Dr Rod Martin
ACRRM NSW Councillor
ACRRM Council
Trainer : Emergency Medicine Skills
Biography
Dr Rod Martin is a Rural Generalist who spends most of his time in Armidale NSW with brief sojourns back home to Theodore, Qld to reload. He does anaesthetics, obstetrics, general practice and emergency medicine. Current roles for ACRRM include: NSW rep on Council, Vocational Training Committee, ALS instructor and sits on the Nominations Committee. He achieved FACRRM in 2009 with DRANZCOG (Adv), JCC anaesthetics and this was completed through RVTS and GPSynergy (on secondment). He continues as a supervisor for both RVTS and GPSynergy and is an examiner for the College and is a Senior Lecturer at the School of Rural Medicine at UNE. This is really only possible as he is backed by his astonishingly patient wife Deborah, and kids who remember what he looks like most of the time.
Dr Louis Peachey
Atherton District Memorial Hospital
Trainer : Emergency Medicine Skills
Biography
Dr Louis Peachey is a Girrimay man from the Djirribaligan language group (Rainforest People) of North Queensland. He is a Senior Medical Officer at the Atherton District Hospital where he works as a Rural Generalist Anaesthetist, and runs a regular clinic at Lotus Glen Correctional Centre.
Dr Peachey was the founding President of the Australian Indigenous Doctors Association (AIDA), and is a former Board member of ACRRM. He has been an advocate for Rural and Indigenous Health for more than 25 years.
He served in Mount Isa as a Senior Lecturer and Medical Educator for MICRRA. Through the Mount Isa Simman Partnership, his team delivered training to remote areas surrounding Mount Isa. Louis was also one of the founding crew of the ACRRM ALS Course.
Dr Peachey served on the National Board of Headspace - National Youth Mental Health Foundation. His time on the board saw a national increase of 80% in the numbers of Indigenous Youth accessing Headspace.