May 2020 - April 2024
Presidents message

Presidents message

Things have certainly changed a lot since the last report I provided for this newsletter.  It goes without saying that the emergence of COVID has had an enormous effect on the lives of older people and an impact on us professionally.  I am grateful we are in Australia and my thoughts are with friends and colleagues overseas where in some places the mortality in residential aged care is as high as 30%. 

The ANZSGM has discussed how we may best respond and contribute to the public discussion with regard to COVID.  Like much of the work of the Society a lot happens both behind the scenes and in relatively informal settings which may not always be visible to members.  There has been a steady stream of emails involving various levels of the Society including sharing information with regard to the various jurisdictional responses which can change rapidly.  We have also provided a suite of relevant information on the website.  We have also been working actively with the RACP in terms of assisting its response, including advising with regard to matters such as the telehealth item numbers. 

The regular business of the Society has proceeded.  Most visibly impacted by COVID was the decision to change the dates for the Melbourne ASM from 2020 to 2021.  This was a tremendous outcome for the Society as we have largely avoided cancellation fees with venues and thus minimised the financial impact – and would not have been possible without a lot of work from the Melbourne Organising Committee, the Professional Conference Organiser, and the respective committees in Western Australia and Queensland which were also impacted by the change in ASM date.   This was seen as preferable to attempting a virtual conference, but I would be remiss if I did not note that we have also lost a major revenue stream for this financial year.

In terms of other notable events we were pleased with the Australian Government’s decision to defer any changes to ACAT – an entirely sensible decision given the current Royal Commission.  A substantial amount of effort was expended by the Society to ensure that stakeholders were very clear on our collective views on this matter.  We have continued to make submissions and representations on a number of other issues including the Medicare Item number review, where we have argued strongly for the importance of maintaining the CGA as the tool of Geriatricians.  For more information, I encourage you to refer to the Council update which was sent recently.

We are delighted to have the new website in place and trust this will remain an important tool for the Society over the next few years.  Our electronic adventure continues as we will hold our Annual General Meeting electronically in a few weeks – so I hope to “see” most of you there.  Over the next few months hopefully the curve will remain flat and we can prepare for the Royal Commission findings due later this year.

Finally I would like to wish Jean Hannan our Membership Officer all the best as she prepares for parental leave, and welcome Stephanie Colbert who will be acting in this role over the next 12 months.

Awards and Recognition

The Society congratulates the following recent recipient of an Australia Day award:

Professor Robert Graham Cumming AO has been awarded Officer of the Order of Australia in the General Division of the Order of Australia

For distinguished service to medical education and research, particularly to ageing and age-related diseases.

University of Sydney

  • Professor of Epidemiology and Geriatric Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, since 2003.
  • Deputy Head, School of Public Health, 2014-2017.
  • Director, Master of International Health Program, 2009-2017.
  • Associate Dean, Postgraduate Coursework, Faculty of Medicine, 2008-2013.
  • Professor in Residence, Infectious Diseases Institute, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda, 2008.
  • Associate Dean, School of Population Health and Health Services Research, 2000-2002.
  • Head, School of Public Health and Community Medicine, 2000-2002.
  • Associate Professor in Epidemiology, Department of Public Health, 1998-2002.
  • Senior Lecturer in Epidemiology, Department of Public Health, 1993-1997.
  • Lecturer in Epidemiology, Department of Public Health, 1990-1992.
  • Group Leader, Concord Health and Ageing in Men Project (CHAMP), current.

Medicine – Other

  • Chair, National Dementia Guidelines Committee, Cognitive Decline Partnership Centre, NHMRC, 2014-2015.
  • Secretary, Australasian Epidemiological Association, 1996-2001.
  • Member, ARC Centre of Excellence in Population Ageing Research, current.

Awards and recognition includes:

  • Clarivate (Thomas Reuters) Highly Cited Researcher, 2016.
  • Distinguished Professorial Service Award, Sydney Medical School, University of Sydney, 2011.
  • Life Member, Australasian Epidemiological Association, 2010.
New Members

New Members

The Society welcomes the following New Members, who were endorsed at the Council meeting held on March 23rd 2020.

Council held March 23rd, 2020

Surname Given name/s Division Category
Ruwanpathirana Radhika Sumadri NSW AT
Wroth Melanie Jane NSW Full
Kwak Jacob Dong Jun NSW Full
Oh Hani NSW Full
Prasad Puneet QLD AT
Chan Jillian Zhi Yin VIC AT
Gayde Ceyda VIC Full
Baird Chelsea VIC Full
Tan Wei Sern WA AT
Irani Khushnam WA AT
Thaw Ko Ko Lin WA Full
 

Thank you Editorial

Farewell our Newsletter Editor!

Tuly Rosenfeld has been our most recent Editor of the ANZSGM newsletter, and has helped us in the transition to this new newsletter format.

Tuly has had a long association with the ANZSGM, and was the designer of the previous membership database system used by ANZSGM.

Thanks Tuly for your service as Editor! Tuly is staying on as a general member of ANZSGM.

ANZSGM New Website is now Live

ANZSGM New Website is now Live

The new website for the Society is now live at https://anzsgm.org/ .  

 

To access Members information you will need to create a new Login account as follows:

Each ANZSGM member will need to generate a new password by either:

  • clicking LOGIN in the top right corner of the Home page at https://anzsgm.org/ 
  • clicking the link at –   “I’m a Member”  

and follow the prompts to generate a new password.

Please take the time to explore the new website and the Members sections.

If you have any feedback or suggestions for the website or come across any inconsistency or error please contact admin@anzsgm.org with details.

 

Information re anzsgm.org Website Security:
The new ANZSGM website anzsgm.org has up to date security. This might limit your access to our website if you are using an earlier operating system.  You would need to access the ANZSGM website from another computer or a different device.

Internet Explorer on Windows 7 will not access the new website due to updated security: The Internet Explorer 11 / Windows 7 combination is now end-of-life and no longer generally supported by Microsoft.

Other modern browsers including Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Microsoft Edge are supported. Additionally Internet Explorer 11 is supported on Windows 10.

If you experience difficulty accessing your members account or invoice please contact members@anzsgm.org for assistance

ANZSGM Membership dues 2020

ANZSGM Membership dues 2020

Subscriptions:  

2020 Membership subscriptions are now due, to take advantage of the early-bird rate your payment will need to be received by May 29th 2020.

All members have been now been sent an email notification from ANZSGM with an invitation to renew your subscription for membership.  

To pay your subscription from this email please follow the included prompts to access your payment dashboard.

If you have not yet received your invoice please contact members@anzsgm.org to confirm we have up to date our contact details and/or to resend your subscription notification.

ANZSGM ASM 2020 postponed

ANZSGM ASM 2020 postponed

Announcement date: Tuesday, 17 March 2020

On the advice of the Department of Health surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic, the local organising committee and the ANZSGM Council have made the decision to cancel the 2020 Annual Scientific Meeting, originally scheduled for May 27-29 in Melbourne, Victoria.

The meeting has been rescheduled until Wednesday 19 May – Friday, 21  May 2021 in Melbourne. We sincerely hope that you will be able to join us then and continue your support for the ANZSGM.  With the outstanding co-operation of our colleagues in Western Australian, the Perth ASM will be postponed to 2022.

 We will contact registered delegates, exhibitors and sponsors with further details.

This was not the vision for the future that we expected but these are unprecedented times. As health professionals working with the older population, we will be called upon to work in the front lines, to  provide high quality care and advocacy for the vulnerable in our society. We wish you good health and fortitude in the months ahead.

We sincerely apologise for any inconvenience.

Best Wishes,

Dr Rajni Joseph and Dr Louise Monk (Co-convenors)

ANZSGM ASM

COVID-19 resources

The COVID-19 section on the ANZSGM website includes a number of articles and resources that may be of relevance to our members.

https://anzsgm.org/resources/covid-19/

Please note that the available Covid-19 information is frequently updating and as a result our resources section will be regularly updated and amended.

COVID-19 Research Survey

Colleagues,

In light of the COVID-19 pandemic and the difficulties it has wrought on the healthcare system, Concord Hospital Geriatric Medicine Department is looking to conduct a study assessing the effects of the pandemic on the function of Geriatric Medicine Departments in Australia and New Zealand. This study is planned to be in the form of two surveys, one taking place in the next few weeks and the other later in the year when the pandemic has run its course.

The aim of these surveys is to assess the imposition this event has on the provision of regular geriatric medical services and workforce distribution. It will also look to characterise novel tools and processes employed to deal with the complex care issues raised. The results of this study will be shared with all participants as soon as practicable to provide insights and guidance on clinical standards employed by other hospitals, as well as shedding light on possible alternate treatment protocols that may be of assistance to the Geriatric Medicine community.

In the near future, the Heads of Geriatric Medicine departments in Australia and New Zealand will receive an email with an information sheet and a link to the survey for completion. Participation is voluntary and anonymous and consent can be withdrawn at any time. This research study has been approved by the Sydney Local Health District Human Research Ethics Committees at Concord Hospital (2020/ETH00800). We appreciate your time in considering involvement in this project, which hopefully should provide real benefit and guidance to our community as we progress through this extraordinary time.

 

Regards,

Dr. Liesl Ischia
Principal Investigator
Department of Medicine
Concord Hospital, Sydney

Professor David Le Couteur
Coordinating Principal Investigator
Department of Medicine
Concord Hospital, Sydney

Professor Vasi Naganathan
Investigator
Department of Medicine
Concord Hospital, Sydney

Privatising the ACATS: Radio National

ABC Radio National Life Matters with Michael Mackenzie

13 January 2020

Click here to listen: ‘Privatising the ACATS

Featuring Dr Eddy Strivens

ANZSGM History project

ANZSGM History project

History Project Update

Over the year since my last report in the Newsletter, the data gathering phase of the history project has made considerable advances.  Lynda Donaldson helped me to locate Society records archived for us by the Royal Australasian College of Physicians and I subsequently met the College Librarian, Karen Myers, who has been extraordinarily helpful in obtaining these and then other records from archive.  Unfortunately, the Australian Geriatrics Society records held in our office only go back to 1988 and the AGS records archived by the RACP to 1987.  Karen Myers was able to obtain minutes of the meetings of the Specialist Advisory Committee (now the Advanced Training Committee) in Geriatrics from 1979 to 1989.

In relation to Annual Scientific Meetings, I can confirm that the first meeting of the Society as a stand-alone entity was in Adelaide, as has been generally agreed.  However, there was uncertainty about whether this meeting was in 1983 or 1984.  This meeting was held, as were many around this time, conjointly with the RACP, and the College program lists the AGS as having held a meeting, immediately after the College Meeting, on 12th May 1984.  Additionally, we have held ASMs continuously from the Adelaide Meeting, giving it the status of the inaugural meeting in a series, until broken by a viral pandemic in 2020.  This verifies Michael Woodward’s claim in 2008 that the Melbourne ASM that year was the 25th Meeting of the Society.

Unfortunately, details of some of the subsequent meetings are rather patchy.  I was most excited when Gideon Caplan sent me a one page document confirming that a stand-alone meeting of the Society was held in Sydney in 1985.  The 1986 meeting was probably held in Tasmania; the first RSL Professor, John Grimley Evans, spoke at the RACP Meeting in Hobart.  However, I have no records of the AGS Meeting.  Peter Landau recalls a meeting in Tasmania which began in Launceston and then moved to Hobart; could the AGS Meeting have been in Launceston in that year?  I first concluded that the 1987 was held on the Gold Coast (Broadbeach) because the Federal Council was held there that year.  Subsequently, the RACP ASM Program showed that Ed Schneider, who was the RSL Professor, spoke at the College Meeting.  I plan to directly approach Members who were involved with these meetings; however, in the hiatus caused by the Corona Virus, I’d appreciate anyone with anecdotes which add further light on these suppositions would be most welcome.  As always, documents, even single pages like Gideon’s, would be even more valuable.

I now have conducted four visits, mostly to members, who have memories of the early days of the Society.  During my time with them, I have conducted a semi-formal interview, all recorded with the permission of the interviewees.  These are being transcribed, partly to confirm my notes at interview, but also to provide an historical source for the Society.  The audio recordings will also be archived.  Clearly, these interviews have been disrupted, but I hope to resume once restrictions are lifted.

The Society and College records of the early years of the Society are now close to being fully mined.  The final task in researching the period pre-1984 will be to examine the records held by the AAG.  Tony Broe pointed out that the early meetings, especially scientific meetings, of the Society were with the Australian Association of Gerontology, rather than the RACP.  The AAG has an extensive archive, thanks particularly to Ruth Inall, who was secretary of the AAG for 21years.  I have permission to examine these records, but my plans to do so soon have been curtailed by travel restrictions. In the meantime, I am editing my personal records of the Society from 1993.

Just to reiterate, I would welcome any memories, anecdotes, documents and photographs you think would be useful, especially about the early days, or any other suggestions members may have.  I will resume visits to key people as soon as I can.

Robert J Prowse

prowserj@bigpond.net.au

Dazed with delirium

The following Brisbane Times article covers an innovation developed by one of our members:

200323 – Brisbane Times – Dazed with delirium

“Dr Eeles and the team at Prince Charles Hospital have developed a custom-made app to assist emergency department doctors to diagnose delirium and what might be causing it.”

March 22, 2020

https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/national/queensland/dazed-with-delirium-jessica-tried-to-explain-but-her-stories-changed-20200319-p54byk.html

 

Painaustralia

Painaustralia

eNews

Issue 95 now available

Please click here to access Painaustralia eNews Issue 95

Earlier issues are also available here

 

Media Releases

06 February 2020

Painaustralia welcomes new veteran suicide prevention commission

Painaustralia has welcomed Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s announcement of a national commissioner for defence and veteran suicide prevention.

To continue reading please download here: Painaustralia welcomes new veteran suicide prevention commission

 

Painaustralia

ADA Declared 2020

ADA Declared 2020

The Australasian Delirium Association presents:

DECLARED 2020

declared2020.com

September 2 – 4 / BCEC

With the theme of “Delirium: Past, Present and Future” and an outstanding panel of international and national speakers, DECLARED 2020 welcomes multidisciplinary clinicians, students, researchers and consumers to vibrant,  subtropical Brisbane to gain a deep understanding of current knowledge, hear latest research, share their experience, and guide the future in delirium care.

Please click here to read more and download the program

 

https://www.delirium.org.au/

https://www.declared2020.com/