October 2021 - October 2024
President’s Message

President’s Message

Hello Colleagues,

Since my last message to you in July, the months have unfolded with ongoing lockdowns, restricted travel, and for many of us, performing clinical and administrative activities we could never have imagined.  

I would like to acknowledge the efforts of geriatricians across Australia and New Zealand during these extremely challenging times as the Delta variant makes its mark on our community. This pandemic has had an enormous impact on our older people which has meant our roles have demanded flexibility, resilience, and innovation.

I know that in Sydney and Melbourne some of you are working on the ‘frontline’ directly caring for people with COVID-19 and helping manage outbreaks in residential care. Many of you in Australia and New Zealand are in the thick of the re-organisation of services to deal with what is in front of us and what may happen further in the future. Having just finished a fortnight rotation on our COVID-19 wards the things that struck me were the importance of following our usual principles on how to provide good acute hospital care, how quickly clinical situations can change, the challenges as a result of patients and their families not being  able to see each other in hospital and the tragic stories of multiple family members across generations being affected.    

While COVID-19 continues to challenge all of us, the core role of ANZSGM in advocating for the care of older people must continue. We are maintaining our advocacy efforts to preserve the role of geriatricians within state run ACATS and our position remains –ACATs should stay in state health and not be moved to NGOs/private organisations, particularly for hospital inpatients.

ANZSGM is part of a growing group of medical organisations acknowledging the need for action on climate change.  Under the RACP Council we have recently added our support to the endorsement of The Lancet Countdown Policy Brief for Australia 2021. The paper recommends a national strategy to prepare for extreme heat, a target of net-zero in 2040 to reduce healthcare emissions, while placing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people at the centre of climate change and health policy making.

Several long-held plans within the Society have really taken shape in the past months and are moving closer to fruition. We are soon launching an Expression of Interest for our Community/Residential Aged Care Special Interest Group. At the centre of their work will be a response to the Royal Commission’s Recommendation 58 (Access to specialists and other health practitioners through Multidisciplinary Outreach Services).

Last month Queensland was the fifth state in the country to legalise voluntary euthanasia for terminally ill patients. Given the shifting legislations across Australia it is timely that the Society has formed a Voluntary Assisted Dying working group who will develop a Society position and policy on key considerations for VAD in older populations. The group met for the first time in September and includes 10 members who represent a diversity of views from a broad representation of membership.

The development of an ANZSGM quarterly webinar series has now been approved by Council and is set to launch in November this year. The webinars will be a great opportunity for different society bodies to present topics of interest to members.

In November Council will meet with the ANZSGM team for a planning session to map out the Society’s activities for the next few years. Our plans continue to grow and we hope this means more value for our members and better support to geriatricians in Australia and New Zealand.

Professor Vasi Naganathan
ANZSGM President

ANZSGM Welcomes New Members

ANZSGM Welcomes New Members

The Society welcomes the following new members who were endorsed at the Council meetings on 26th July 2021 and 20 September 2021.

NSW
Amelia Mori (AT)
Arthur Chee (AT)
Sarah Younan (AT)
Nihal Nanda (Full)
James Muggleton (AT)
Xin Wen Ong (AT)
Cathy Corbett (Full)
Aneesha Bhagat Singh (AT)
Marion Matheson (AT)

Western Australia
Shyue (Joshua) Chong (AT)
Poh Chua (AT)
Nicola Bailey (AT)
Zarrin Allam (Full)
Kate Saunders (Full)

Queensland
Sze Chan (AT)
Mitchell Cox (AT)
Saamiah Khan (AT)
Varun Chauhan (AT)
Hayley Chen (AT)
Jen Yuh Lim (Full)

Victoria
Sok Shin Yap (AT)
Ramzi Hijazi (AT)
Corinne Lau Hing Yim (AT)
Jack Rush (AT)
Paul Chong (AT)
Samuel Johnson (AT)
Jessica Disler (AT)
Michael Chan (AT)
Christopher Emmett (AT)

South Australia
Saif Hamdon (AT)
Su Ross (AT)
Mani Berghout (AT)
Lucy Pittolo (AT)

NZ
Natasha Perry (AT)
Rosie Chellet (AT)
Laura Carbone (AT)
Raenna Chan (AT)
Sadhana Chandra Mohan (AT)
Alwin Lim (AT)
Steven Kinsey (Full)

ANZSGM Webinar Series

ANZSGM Webinar Series

ANZSGM is launching a new quarterly webinar series that provides a platform for practitioners to share their success stories, unpack challenges, and dive into topics that the membership feels are important. 

The ANZSGM Webinar Series will commence this month, showcasing distinguished speakers, exploring controversial topics and reviewing the latest research in Geriatrics and related fields. These live and on-demand webinars will cover the full spectrum of the Society’s interest areas—in upcoming webinars and our growing archive of past webinars. All content is available to ANZSGM members at no cost.

ANZSGM welcomes webinar proposals from Society Members, please contact us with your suggestions at admin@anzsgm.org    

Upcoming Webinar

Helping Older People with Emergency General Surgery and Tips for Setting up a Perioperative Service
Date: November 24, 2021, 3.00pm AEDT  
Register HERE

Presenters: Dr Rachel Aitken, Alfred Health VIC and Dr Aisling Fleury, Logan Hospital QLD

Dr Rachel Aitken
Rachel Aitken is a Geriatrician and General Physician with an interest in the perioperative care of older people. She works in Orthogeriatrics at Alfred Health and Trauma Geriatrics and the Perioperative care of Older Patients undergoing Surgery (POPS) service at Melbourne Health. Rachel completed a POPS fellowship at Guy’s and St Thomas’ Trust in London, during which she had the opportunity to learn from NELA (National Emergency Laparotomy Audit) as the Older Persons research fellow. She has completed a Master of Medicine (Perioperative Stream) with Monash University, is a member of the ANZCA Perioperative Working Group and ANZSGM Perioperative SIG.

Dr Aisling Fleury
Aisling Fleury is a perioperative geriatrician in Logan Hospital in Queensland. She is clinical lead for perioperative medicine, which she helped establish. Outside of work she is a keen open water swimmer, hiker and rock climber. 

ANZSGM Joins Health Roundtable

ANZSGM Joins Health Roundtable

ANZSGM and the Health Roundtable have formalised a collaborative partnership. Members of both organisations will benefit from the close relationship due to our shared interests in improving the care of older people in Australia and New Zealand.

This collaboration will benefit ANZSGM members through access to Health Roundtable’s data by way of presentations and access to Health Roundtable’s data for research.

For more information on the Health Roundtable and their GEM benchmarking program click here to view their website or contact Ben Wakeling at ben.wakeling@healthroundtable.org or on +61 468 993 080.

Australian and New Zealand Hip Fracture Registry 2021 Annual Report

Australian and New Zealand Hip Fracture Registry 2021 Annual Report

The Australian and New Zealand Hip Fracture Registry (ANZHFR) has released its sixth patient level report and ninth facility level report with a continued focus on performance against the binational Hip Fracture Care Clinical Care Standard. The ANZHFR has seen a year-on-year increase in Registry participation, with 86 hospitals (64 Australian hospitals and 22 New Zealand hospitals) contributing data on 14,816 patient care episodes and 117 hospitals providing facility level data to the 2021 report.

Progress is evident in a number of domains of hospital care including assessment of cognition, assessment and management of pain, identification of delirium in the post-operative phase and provision of written information for patients as they transition from the acute hospital setting. Pleasingly, geriatricians continue to be increasingly involved in the management of older people who have fractured their hip, represented by the growing number of ANZ hospitals reporting shared care arrangements (31% of ANZ hospitals) or regular input by an orthogeriatric liaison service (29% of ANZ hospitals), the two most common models of care reported. Fewer hospitals reported that no formal arrangements exist.

For the first time, actual first day mobilisation is reported, which shows that whilst 90% of patients were given the opportunity to mobilise on the day after surgery, only 47% achieved stepping or walking.  Considerable variation was evident between hospitals and their performance on this aspect of care, with some hospitals getting over 90% of patients out of bed the day after surgery, whilst at other hospitals it is as low as 20-30%. Further work is needed to understand and address barriers to first day mobilisation.

The number of people leaving hospital on treatment for osteoporosis remains low (27%), without much improvement over time. Understanding why there has been little progress is a priority for ANZHFR, and further work is planned in the form of a Sprint Audit, which will look in greater detail at prescription and administration of bone protection medication before patients leave hospital.

The report also includes a new outlier report, which monitors hospital performance against the Hip Fracture Care Clinical Care Standard quality indicators and enables sites to easily see areas of high quality care or those that require review.

Electronic copies of both the printed version of the Annual Report, and a full digital report, which covers additional domains not included in the printed report are available at www.anzhfr.org. To listen to ANZHFR Co-chairs Professors Jacqueline Close and Ian Harris discuss the highlights of the report and key areas of focus for the future, tune into the ANZHFR podcast series Hipcast.

In other ANZHFR news, top performing hospitals in Australia and New Zealand were recently recognised for their achievements against the Hip Fracture Care Clinical Care Standard quality indicators, with the Inaugural Golden Hip award. The Golden Hip award was initiated by the Scottish Hip Fracture Audit to promote and reward better health care for people with hip fractures. The ANZHFR congratulates the finalists and the winning hospitals – Princess Alexandra Hospital in QLD, Australia (pictured) and North Shore Hospital, on New Zealand’s North Island, who took out the prize for the best overall performance against the Clinical Care Standard.

You can keep up to date on ANZHFR events and all things hip fracture related by following ANZHFR on Twitter and LinkedIn. For information on participating in the ANZHFR, contact Jamie Hallen j.hallen@neura.edu.au.

Dementia in Australia Report

Dementia in Australia Report

Dementia in Australia Report
The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare has launched an online report that provides a comprehensive picture of dementia in Australia, including the latest statistics on dementia prevalence, burden of disease, deaths, expenditure, as well as the use of health and aged care services among people with dementia and information on carers of people with dementia. Read more here.

MBA and MCNZ finalise changes to CPD requirements

MBA and MCNZ finalise changes to CPD requirements

2021 and 2022
There are no changes to CPD requirements in 2021 and 2022. Please see the RACP 2021 MyCPD Framework for further details.

The additional requirements for Aotearoa New Zealand Fellows also remains in place.

The College’s CPD resources are available on the MyCPD Interactive Handbook and the Online Learning Resources platform.

From 2023
The Medical Board of Australia has released its revised Registration Standard – Continuing Professional Development‘.

The Medical Council of New Zealand’s Strengthened Recertification requirements will also commence from 2023.

To align with the new standards, the RACP will implement changes from January 2023 through a revised MyCPD Framework. Further communications on the changes will be released throughout the second half of 2021 and in 2022.

Please don’t hesitate to contact the CPD Team if you have any questions 
AU: 1300 697 227 or MyCPD@racp.edu.au
NZ: 64 4 460 8122 or MyCPD@racp.org.nz

Webinar: Staying active during COVID-19 restrictions

Webinar: Staying active during COVID-19 restrictions

ANZSGM are please to endorse this free webinar that will present short talks from individuals and health professionals about keeping active during COVID-19 restrictions and after lockdown.

Being physically active can keep people of all ages and abilities healthy and connected. Lockdown has made it difficult for many people to stay active. We need to work together to support older people and those with disabilities to be active.

 
The talks will cover: 
  • how older Australians and those with physical disabilities are managing to stay active during COVID-19 restrictions,
  • the benefits of being active for function and fall prevention,
  • expert advice from health professionals and practical tips on getting more active now and when restrictions ease.

The event is hosted by the Institute for Musculoskeletal Health, a research partnership with the University of Sydney (USYD) and Sydney Local Health District (SLHD). The event is supported by the Centre of Research Excellence in the Prevention of Fall-related Injuries (CRE-PFI), Australian Physiotherapy Association (APA), Older Persons Advocacy Network (OPAN), Safe Exercise at Home, and Disability Sports Australia (DSA).

After you have registered, a link to the webinar will be emailed to you. This webinar will be recorded and a link to the recording will be emailed to everyone who registers, even if you are unable to make the live event. If you have not received a link to the live event on the day, please email us at imh.media@sydney.edu.au. Register here.

Webinar: Rethinking the Dementia Diagnosis Conversation

Webinar: Rethinking the Dementia Diagnosis Conversation

This free webinar will be presented by Professor Henry Brodaty (Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing) and Professor Lee-Fay Low (University of Sydney). It aims to help diagnosticians improve communications of the dementia diagnosis and  help set people with dementia and their supporters on the right path forward. Register here.

Time: 5pm (AEDT)
Date: Wednesday 13 October 2021

AIMSS website launch

AIMSS website launch

The AIMSS has launched a newly designed website that is faster, easier to navigate, more user-friendly, and full of innovative resources and updated information. Visit the site here. 

If you would like  to provide additional feedback – please use this form: https://forms.gle/HDH4X2nxAXhFmYTo8

In case any members would like to have profiles added/updated please contact our AIMSS Manager Wasantha Perera (Wasantha.perera@unimelb.edu.au).

Please note that the Members Hub content will be developed over the coming months

AJA Latest Issue

AJA Latest Issue

AJA September Issue: Volume 40 (3)
We welcome our new Associate Editor, Dr Janani Thillainadesan, staff specialist geriatrician at Concord Hospital, and Conjoint Lecturer at the University of Sydney.

The September Issue brings together a wealth of reading on research evidence in gerontology and geriatrics, from the views of health-care workers about cannabis-containing medicines to an examination of patterns of personal alarm use. The Issue features an Invited Article reflecting on prevalence of ageism during the COVID-19 pandemic. A team from Monash University outline the characteristics of Victorian nursing homes associated with COVID-19 related outbreaks and mortality during the 2020 second wave. 

There is a systematic review on energy expenditure in people living with dementia, along with a range of other dementia-related articles:

Last but not least, there is a Reflection on ‘beauty tips in dementia’

The complete Table of Contents and all articles can be accessed (subject to membership) at

Australasian Journal on Ageing – Wiley Online Library

We hope that this Issue will assist in guiding your research and practice. We welcome contributions from you about your innovative work. We thank all our contributors and our volunteer peer reviewers.

Jane Sims, Deputy Editor-in-Chief, AJA.

ANZBMS Advanced Clinical Postgraduate Meeting 2021

ANZBMS Advanced Clinical Postgraduate Meeting 2021

ANZBMS Advanced Clinical Postgraduate Meeting 2021
23rd and 24th October 2021

This interactive online meeting will include  talks and cases by prominent specialists in the bone field. The meeting is targeted at Specialists training in the management of bone and mineral diseases, and will include didactic lectures and case presentation discussions. It would be suitable for trainees in numerous disciplines, including endocrinology, nephrology, rheumatology, rehabilitation and geriatric medicine, orthopaedic surgery as well as general medicine.

Cost: Non-ANZBMS member – AUD $150 (GST inc)
ANZBMS members – AUD $100 (GST inc)
Program and registration here.

ADHA Virtual Sessions

ADHA Virtual Sessions

The Australian Digital Health Agency is hosting a series of upcoming new virtual classroom sessions. Tailored specifically for specialists, practice nurses and practice managers, the virtual sessions use an online training environment to demonstrate the core features of My Health Record in either the Genie or National Provider Portal environments. The sessions are designed to be interactive where participants are encouraged to ask questions and raise any issues.

Understand how to:

  • save time by accessing overview summary documents including medicines, immunisations, pathology and diagnostic imaging
  • find documents relevant to your clinical practice e.g. discharge summaries
  • understand how to view the available Medicare information.

View the list of available session times and register for a session:
Learn how to use My Health Record in the National Provider Portal here.
Learn how to use My Health Record in Genie here

ANZSGM Upcoming Events

ANZSGM Upcoming Events

ANZSGM South Australia Division State Scientific Meeting
Registration is now open for ANZSGM South Australia Division’s State Scientific Meeting ‘Interfaces in Geriatric Medicine’. Find more information and the full program of speakers here

Date: 23-24 October 2021
Venue: Adelaide Hills Convention Centre Hahndorf,  South Australia
Cost: $250/person (Consultant), $100/person (Non-Medical). Invited speakers and Advanced Trainees are free.
Register HERE


ANZSGM New Zealand Retreat – POSTPONED
The New Zealand Division of ANZSGM and the Retreat Organising Committee have made the decision to postpone the NZ Retreat to 10-12 March 2022. Our Venue will remain the same- the Tahuaroa Conference Centre at Waitangi Treaty Grounds in Northland. The retreat will focus on how to develop and adapt services to meet the needs and values of all Aotearoa’s older people. 

Date: 10-12 March 2022
Venue: Tahuaroa Functions Centre, Waitangi, New Zealand. 
Close of Early Registration: 10 January 2022
Register HERE