The changing face of anaesthesia and pain medicine

Transcription

The changing face of anaesthesia and pain medicine
The changing face
of anaesthesia
and pain medicine
ANZCA ASM May 2-5, 2015
Adelaide Convention Centre
ASM.anzca.edu.au
Program Handbook
Contents
1Welcome from the president
and the dean
2Welcome from the meeting
convenor and scientific
convenors
4 Venue floorplan
6 Keynote speakers
8 Invited speakers and facilitators
12Full scientific program
25 CPD program
26 ePoster sessions
28 Prizes
30Workshops
33 Small group discussions
38Breakfast and lunchtime
sessions
40 ASM App and Virtual ASM
41ANZCA acknowledges the
spirit of ANZAC
42 Business meetings
43ANZCA notice of annual
general meeting
43FPM notice of annual general
meeting
44 Social program
46 Optional activities
49 Optional local Adelaide tours
50 Restaurant suggestions
52Healthcare industry sponsors
and exhibitors
54Healthcare industry exhibitor
profiles
61 Walking map
62 Meeting information
64 General information
WELCOME FROM THE PRESIDENT AND THE DEAN
It is our great pleasure to welcome
you to Adelaide for the 2015
Australian and New Zealand College
of Anaesthetists (ANZCA) Annual
Scientific Meeting (ASM), to be held
from May 2-5.
ASM Regional Organising Committee
PARTICIPANTS
Dr Aileen Craig, Convenor
Dr Kirsten McCullough, SGD Convenor
Dr Tim Porter, Treasurer
Dr Thien Le Cong, HCI Liaison Convenor
Dr Nathan Davis, Scientific Convenor
Dr Julia Coldrey, Social Convenor
Dr Bill Wilson, Deputy Scientific Convenor
Dr Giresh Chandran, New Fellows Conference Co-convenor
Dr Gary Clothier, FPM Scientific Convenor
Dr Scott Ma, New Fellows Conference Co-convenor
Dr Rob Young, Workshop Co-convenor
Dr Rodney Mitchell, ANZCA Councillor
Dr Merv Atkinson, Workshop Co-convenor
Dr Nicole Phillips, DPA ASMs
Dr Kaushik Saha, Workshop Co-convenor
Dr Michael Vagg, FPM ASM Officer
Dr Genevieve Goulding
ANZCA President
This year the theme of the
meeting is “The changing face of
anaesthesia and pain medicine”.
It is said that the body of medical
knowledge doubles every five years
– it would be impossible for us to
stay abreast of this rapid pace of
change and keep informed about
relevant research and advances
in technology, pharmacology and
treatments without meetings such
as this.
“Adelaide, voted by Lonely
Planet as ‘The Perfect
Host City’.”
major sponsors
Professor Edward (Ted) Shipton
FPM Dean
In addition, the health system also
faces challenges with changing
demographics due to an ageing
population, the burden of chronic
disease, an uncertain global
economy and fiscal restraint, all of
which impact on the health budget.
The convenors, their organising
committees and the event
management team have worked
long and hard to develop a scientific
program designed to stimulate
and inform. The social program
allows you to network and unwind
at the iconic newly extended and
refurbished Convention Centre in
Adelaide, voted by Lonely Planet as
‘The Perfect Host City’.
We are grateful to all the invited
speakers, from around the world as
well as locally and the outstanding
support from the healthcare
industry who together all contribute
to making this a successful, quality
conference.
We both look forward to welcoming
you to the beautiful city of Adelaide
for the 2015 ANZCA ASM.
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ADVERTISEMENT
“During the meeting we look to the future
and present the latest scientific research and
clinical advances that will determine how
our specialties advance. ”
WELCOME FROM CONVENORS
On behalf of the Regional Organising Committee, we
warmly and excitedly welcome you to Adelaide and the
2015 Annual Scientific Meeting of the Australian and
New Zealand College of Anaesthetists and the Faculty
of Pain Medicine.
The Regional Organising Committee have spoilt you
with entertainment and functions showcasing the
food and wine that has made South Australia famous
and as promised we continue the tradition of fun and
camaraderie that ASM is known for.
“The changing face of anaesthesia and pain medicine”
reflects not only the changing face of our demography
but also the cultural changes within Australia and New
Zealand that are impacting on our practice today.
Of course, an event like this would not be possible
without the sponsorship of the healthcare industry
and we welcome our industry colleagues once again
and look forward to the opportunity to experience an
extensive healthcare exhibition.
During the meeting we look to the future and present,
to the latest scientific research and clinical advances
that will determine how our specialties advance. We
have put together a scientific program that is bound
to educate, challenge and inspire – there really is
something here for everyone.
Dr Aileen Craig
Convenor
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Finally we wish to thank all the delegates for taking
time to attend and we hope you enjoy your time
in Adelaide.
Dr Nathan Davis
Scientific Convenor
Dr Gary Clothier
FPM Scientific Convenor
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CITY
FOYER
1
C1 C2 C3 C4
CITY
FOYER
2
CITY
CITY
FOYER FOYER 4
3
VENUE FLOORPLAN
LIFT
STAIR
ESCALATOR
CENTRAL
WEST
FESTIVAL DRIVE
RIVERBANK
CAR PARK
PANORAMA
SUITE
FOYER
L1
FOYER F
FOYER
L2
FOYER
L3
LIFT
FOYER
R8
RIVERBANK
CAR PARK
ATRIUM
ENTRANCE
L3
R7
R8b
STAIR
L1b L2
FOYER
R7
R8
OFFICE F
L1a
FOYER
R4
STAIR
STAIR
STAIR
CENTRAL
FOYER
R5
FOYER
R6
R6
R6b
R4
LIFT
R5
F
G
M
LINK
OFFICE
H
H
STAIR
FOYER H
PANORAMA
BALLROOM
PANORAMA
FOYER
Information desk
Ground level, foyer M
ANZCA lounge
Ground level, hall H
LIFT
MAIN
ENTRANCE
P1 P2
P3
ESCALATOR
I
NORTH
TERRACE
CAR PARK
J
K
PANORAMA
ROOMS
PLAZA
ACCESS
RAMP
LIFT
LIFT
STAIR
Plenary sessions
Hall L and M
Healthcare industry exhibition
Ground level, hall H
ESCALATOR
ESCALATOR
Speaker support centre
Lower level, riverbank room 1 (R1)
ePoster locations
Lower level foyer R5, ground level
foyer L next to registration desk and
within the HCI area.
CS1
CS2
NORTH TERRACE
S3
STAIR
LOWER LEVEL
WEST
CENTRAL
RIVERBANK
OFFICE
FOYER
R4
STAIR
4
LIFT
Registration desk
Ground level, foyer L
OFFICE K
R8b
STAIR
UPPER LEVEL
ATRIUM
ENTRANCE
O
R8
FOYER
R1
RECEPTION
FOYER G
ATRIUM
FOYER
N
FOYER
R8
R1
RIVERBANK
ROOMS
WEST
LIFT
R2
STAIR &
ESCALATOR
LIFT
STAIR
R3
LIFT
LIFT
L
FOYER M
RIVERBANK
BOARD ROOM
FOYER FOYER
R3
R2
ESCALATOR
FOYER L
ESCALATOR
REGATTAS
BISTRO
RIVERBANK
OFFICE
LIFT
MONTEFIORE ROAD
PLAZA
ACCESS
RAMP
LOWER LEVEL
WEST
LOADING
DOCK
K
NORTH TERRACE
GROUND LEVEL
WESTERN
ENTRANCE
J
LIFT
LOADING
DOCK
CITY
TERRACE
I
NORTH
TERRACE
CAR PARK
FOYER
R7
R7
FOYER
R5
FOYER
R6
R6
R6b
LIFT
R5
R4
R2
R1
FOYER
R1
CITY
SUITES
REGATTAS
BISTRO
RIVERBANK
BOARD ROOM
FOYER FOYER
R3
R2
R3
CS3
CS4
CITY
ROOMS
CITY
FOYER
1
C1 C2 C3 C4
CITY
FOYER
2
STAIR
CITY
CITY
FOYER FOYER 4
3
LIFT
RIVERBANK
ROOMS
CITY
TERRACE
GROUND LEVEL
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KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
Professor Rupert Pearse
ANZCA ASM Visitor
Professor Rupert Pearse graduated
in 1996 from St George’s Hospital
Medical School, London, UK.
After time working in general
medicine and anaesthesia, he
returned to St George’s Hospital
where he developed many of
his current research interests
and completed his training in
Intensive Care Medicine. In 2006,
he was appointed Senior Lecturer in Intensive Care Medicine at
Queen Mary University of London and was recently promoted to
Professor. He has now given up clinical anaesthesia to concentrate
on his academic work and clinical duties on the intensive care
unit at The Royal London Hospital. Rupert was recently appointed
as one of only 23 National Institute for Health Research (UK)
Research Professors in recognition and support of his research
in perioperative medicine to improve patient outcomes
following major surgery. He plays a leading role in a number of
large national and international multi-centre studies including
OPTIMISE, ISOS, EuSOS, METS, VISION and EPOCH.
Professor Irene Tracey
FPM ASM Visitor
Professor Irene Tracey is the
Nuffield Professor of Anaesthetic
Science, Director of the Oxford
Centre for Functional Magnetic
Resonance Imaging of the Brain
(FMRIB), Head of the Nuffield
Division of Anaesthetics and
Associate Head of the Medical
Sciences Division at the
University of Oxford, England.
Over the past 12 years her multidisciplinary research team has
contributed to a better understanding of pain perception, pain
relief and nociceptive processing within the injured and noninjured human CNS using neuroimaging techniques. The FMRIB
Centre is recognised as one of the world’s leading neuroimaging
laboratories that integrates research into key neurological and
neuroscientific problems with cutting-edge developments in
MR physics and data analysis (www.fmrib.ox.ac.uk). The Centre
has approximately 100 scientists and clinicians from a range of
backgrounds and Professor Tracey has been their Director for the
past nine years.
Irene Tracey was born in 1966 and performed her undergraduate
and graduate studies in Biochemistry at the University of Oxford
where she graduated with First Class Honours, winning the
Gibb’s Prize for joint top-first. She held a post-doctoral position
at Harvard Medical School before returning to the UK in 1996 to
help establish the FMRIB Centre. She is an elected Councillor to
the International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) and was
Chair of the Scientific Program Committee for the Milan 2012
biannual world congress. In 2008, she was awarded the triennial
Patrick Wall Medal from the Royal College of Anaesthetists and in
2009 she was made a FRCA for her contributions to the discipline.
She is Deputy Chair of the UK’s Medical Research Council’s
Neuroscience and Mental Health Board.
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COLLEGE CEREMONY ORATOR
Professor Tomás Corcoran
ANZCA Australasian Visitor
Professor Tomás Corcoran is the
Director of Research in Anaesthesia
and Pain Medicine in Royal Perth
Hospital, Clinical Professor in the
University of Western Australia,
and an inaugural Raine Foundation
Clinical Research Fellow. He
completed his anaesthesia training
in Ireland in 2003 and migrated
to Western Australia to complete
Intensive Care Medicine training in 2005. His medical doctorate
awarded in the same year examined the influence of propofol on
myocardial reperfusion injury. He has published over 35 original
articles and book chapters, secured over $2 million in grant funding
and is a Chief Investigator on two NHMRC-funded trials (BALANCED
and RELIEF).
He has a diverse portfolio of collaborations and research interests,
including reperfusion injury, perioperative immune response
and long-term outcomes, fluid therapy strategies, biomarkers
in traumatic brain injury, perioperative coagulation, free-radical
biology and models of preoperative assessment. He is a Chief
Investigator of the Neurotrauma Research Program of Western
Australia and a member of the ANZCA Trials Group Executive. He has
special interests in anaesthesia for the critically ill and anaesthesia
for the elderly.
Professor Robert Sneyd
ANZCA South Australia Visitor
Professor Robert Sneyd graduated
from Cambridge University in 1981,
and continued his medical training
in London. Half way through he
undertook a research degree and
then spent a period working full
time in the pharmaceutical industry
before returning to work in the NHS.
After completing his UK anaesthetic
training Robert worked at the
University of Michigan Medical School at Ann Arbor, USA. In 1993,
he returned to the South West as a Consultant Anaesthetist and
then moved to the University as Reader in Anaesthesia and then
Professor. In 1998, he took over the running of the Plymouth
Postgraduate Medical School, first as Acting Dean and then as Dean.
Robert attends to clinical work as a Consultant Anaesthetist at
Derriford hospital, mostly in neuro-anaesthesia and his research
interests focus on drugs, pharmacology and pharmacokinetics with
related projects based on signal processing.
Robert now works as Dean of the Plymouth University Peninsula
Schools of Medicine and Dentistry and leads the programs in
Medicine, Dentistry, Biomedicine and Healthcare Science.
In anaesthesia he has engaged nationally through AAGBI (Council
2006-9, Vice-President 2009-11) and the Royal College of
Anaesthetists, UK as Vice-President (2011-2012) and a
Council member.
Dr David Lussier
FPM South Australia Visitor
Dr David Lussier obtained his Medical
Degree from University of Montreal,
in Canada and later completed a
residency in Internal Medicine and
Fellowship in Geriatric Medicine. He
also did a three-year training in Pain
Medicine and Palliative Care at Beth
Israel Medical Center, in New York.
He is Assistant Professor at University
of Montreal and Adjunct Professor at McGill University, Montreal,
Canada. He is a practicing physician at the Institute universitaire
de gériatrie de Montréal and the McGill University Health Center,
where he has developed pain clinics especially devoted to
older patients.
Dr Lussier’s research interests include pharmacology of analgesics
and new approaches to manage pain, with a special focus on older
persons. He has written several review articles and book chapters
on the treatment of pain in older patients and patients with cancer,
as well as on adjuvant analgesics. He is also co-editor of books on
“Pharmacology of Pain” and “Adjuvant analgesics”. He has presented
at numerous conferences, both at national and international levels.
Dr Lussier is the founding chairman of a Special Interest Group of
the International Association for the Study on Pain, on pain in
older persons.
Associate Professor
Gregory Crosby
Organising Committee Visitor
Associate Professor Gregory Crosby,
an Associate Professor at Harvard
Medical School and Vice Chair
for Finance in the Department
of Anesthesiology, Perioperative,
and Pain Medicine at Brigham
and Women’s Hospital in Boston,
is an internationally known
neuroanesthesiologist and basic
neuroscientist. He has particular expertise in perioperative cognitive
morbidity. His research investigates the molecular mechanisms
of general anesthetic-induced neurotoxicity and plasticity during
brain development and senescence how preoperative cognitive
impairment affects surgical outcomes.
He has published numerous original articles, editorials, and
book chapters, been long funded by the US National Institutes
of Health, and reviews for major funding agencies and journals
in anesthesiology and neuroscience. He is a senior examiner for
the American Board of Anesthesiology, a past-president of the
Society for Neuroscience in Anesthesiology and Critical Care, and
is the Section Editor for the ‘Neuroscience in Anesthesiology and
Perioperative Medicine’ and ‘Pediatric Neuroscience’ sections of
Anesthesia and Analgesia. He is also a skilled lecturer and frequent
contributor to national and international meetings on topics
pertaining to clinical neuroanesthesia, anesthetic neurotoxicity,
brain aging, and perioperative cognitive dysfunction.
Ms Gill Hicks
You Only Live Twice
Well, in my case you can
absolutely live twice. Each and
every day that has passed since
my rescue following the horrific
terrorist bombings in London,
2005, I have praised all those
who never gave up. The medics
have become my role models
in what I call my life Number 2,
and it is my vow to give back to
humanity and make a difference just as they have done for me.
Severely and permanently injured in the London bombings of
July 7, 2005, Gill Hicks lost both legs from below the knee. She
discovered a great inner strength to not only fight for her life
that morning but to learn to walk again using prosthetic legs.
Gill is truly grateful to even be alive. She is determined to make
her life count, to make a significant difference. Her aim is to use
her experience to do all she can to deter anyone from following
a path of violent action. She is a firm believer that we all have
the strength and ability to make a difference and to create a
world that is peaceful.
Originally from Adelaide, Gill has lived in London since 1992
and now divides her time between the United Kingdom and
Australia. She is former Publishing Director of the architecture,
design and contemporary culture magazine, Blueprint, Director
of Dangerous Minds multi-disciplinary design and publishing
group, and latterly Head of Curation at the UK’s Design Council.
She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, Trustee of the
Women’s Playhouse Trust and is an Advisor to Psychology
Beyond Borders.
In 2006 Gill was appointed Ambassador for Peace Direct (Best
New Charity 2005), in 2007 an Advocate for Leonard Cheshire
Disability and most recently has founded M.A.D. for Peace, a
not-for-profit organisation which communicates the importance
of our individual responsibility in creating a world in which
extreme conflict is ended.
She is well-known for her inspirational talks and seminars with
many diverse organisations in the UK and Australia including
charities, city institutions, schools and community groups.
Her first book, One Unknown, is published by Rodale, part of Pan
Macmillan and was shortlisted for the Mind Book of the Year,
2007.
Gill has recently been honoured with an MBE for her services
to charity in the Queen’s New Year’s Honours List, and became
both Australian of the Year in the UK and Australian Woman
of the Year in the UK. She was also recently listed in the
prestigious 2011 edition of Who’s Who of Australian Women.
In 2013 Gill gave birth to her first child - Amelie - at the age
of 44.
Ms Gill Hicks appears by arrangement with Saxton Speakers Bureau.
Internationally Robert has worked within the European society
of Anaesthesiology, ESA as a Board member, a Director and still
remains a member.
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INVITED SPEAKERS
Dr Christopher Acott South Australia, Australia
Dr Matthew Anstey Victoria, Australia
Dr Dale Ashby South Australia, Australia
Dr Mervyn Atkinson South Australia, Australia
Associate Professor Rob Baker South Australia, Australia
Professor Bernhard Baune South Australia, Australia
Dr Vanessa Beavis Auckland, New Zealand
Associate Professor Michael Bennett New South Wales, Australia
Dr Philip Blum Northern Territory, Australia
Dr Mark Brooke-Smith South Australia, Australia
Dr Roger Browning Western Australia, Australia
Dr Drew Carter South Australia, Australia
Dr Eoin Casey Victoria, Australia
Dr Damian Castanelli Victoria, Australia
Professor Matthew Chan Shatin, Hong Kong
Associate Professor Marianne Chapman South Australia, Australia
Mr Jacob Chisholm South Australia, Australia
Dr Nicholas Chrimes Victoria, Australia
Dr Steve Chryssidis South Australia, Australia
Professor Anna Chur-Hansen South Australia, Australia
Dr Jonathan Clarke South Australia, Australia
Dr Ravi Cooray South Australia, Australia
Dr Michael Corkeron Queensland, Australia
Dr David Costi South Australia, Australia
Professor Martin Culwick Queensland, Australia
Dr John Currie South Australia, Australia
Dr Allan Cyna South Australia, Australia
Dr Andrew Czuchwicki South Australia, Australia
Dr David Daly Victoria, Australia
Associate Professor Andrew Davidson Victoria, Australia
Dr Jason D’Costa South Australia, Australia
Dr Adam Deane South Australia, Australia
Associate Professor Alicia Dennis South Australia, Australia
Mr Kumud Dhital New South Wales, Australia
Dr Alex Douglas Queensland, Australia
Dr Chris Drummond South Australia, Australia
Associate Professor Adam Elshaug New South Wales, Australia
Dr Yasmin Endlich South Australia, Australia
Dr Susan Evans South Australia, Australia
Dr Douglas Fahlbusch South Australia, Australia
Dr Cormac Fahy South Australia, Australia
Dr Jeffrey Faunt South Australia, Australia
Dr Andrew Fenton South Australia, Australia
Dr Mark Finnis South Australia, Australia
Dr Joanna Flynn South Australia, Australia
Mr Lewis Fry Auckland, New Zealand
Dr Rob Fry Auckland, New Zealand
Ms Laura Gallagher South Australia, Australia
Professor Stephen Gibson Victoria, Australia
Dr Martin Graves New South Wales, Australia
Mr David Gyorki Victoria, Australia
Professor Rainer Haberberger South Australia, Australia
Associate Professor David Harley Australian Capital Territory, Australia
Dr Chris Hayes New South Wales, Australia
Dr Simon Hendel Victoria, Australia
Dr Peter Herriot South Australia, Australia
Dr Jonathan Hiller Victoria, Australia
Dr Simon Hockley South Australia, Australia
Mr Paul Hollington South Australia, Australia
Dr Dan Holmes Northern Territory, Australia
Dr Mat Hope Queensland, Australia
Professor Mark Hutchinson South Australia, Australia
Dr Christine Huxtable South Australia, Australia
Dr Elizabeth Inaido-Lee National Capital District, Papua New Guinea
Dr Hilmy Ismail Victoria, Australia
Dr Andrew Jackson New South Wales, Australia
Dr Jim Jannes South Australia, Australia
Dr Simon Jenkins South Australia, Australia
Dr Majo Joseph South Australia, Australia
Dr Billingsley Kaambwa South Australia, Australia
Dr Balvinder Kaur Victoria, Australia
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Professor Dorothy Keefe South Australia, Australia
Dr Zoe Keon-Cohen Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom
Mr Sanjeev Khurana South Australia, Australia
Commander Corey Kucik Australia
Professor Kate Leslie Victoria, Australia
Dr Thien LeCong South Australia, Australia
Dr David Liu Queensland, Australia
Dr James London South Australia, Australia
Dr Rachel Lowe Barcelona, Spain
Professor Guy Ludbrook South Australia, Australia
Dr Sam Lumb South Australia, Australia
Dr Michael Lumsden-Steel Tasmania, Australia
Dr Allan Mackillop Queensland, Australia
Professor Guy Maddern South Australia, Australia
Dr Matt Maiden Victoria, Australia
Dr Mark Markou South Australia, Australia
Dr Nicholas Marks South Australia, Australia
Dr Stefan Mazur Victoria, Australia
Associate Professor Andrew McGavigan South Australia, Australia
Dr David McLeod South Australia, Australia
Dr Simon McRae South Australia, Australia
Dr George Merridew Tasmania, Australia
Professor Alan Merry Auckland, New Zealand
Dr Chris Mitchell Western Australia, Australia
Associate Professor John Moloney Victoria, Australia
Dr Michelle Mulligan New South Wales, Australia
Professor Paul Myles Victoria, Australia
Dr Faizur Noore New South Wales, Australia
Dr Gerry O’Callaghan South Australia, Australia
Dr Catherine Olweny Victoria, Australia
Dr Kym Osborn South Australia, Australia
Dr Adam Osomanski New South Wales, Australia
Professor Harry Owen South Australia, Australia
Dr Thomas Painter South Australia, Australia
Dr Bruce Paix South Australia, Australia
Dr Dana Pakrou South Australia, Australia
Dr Sandra Peake South Australia, Australia
Dr Dan Peet South Australia, Australia
Dr Christopher Perry South Australia, Australia
Associate Professor Philip Peyton Victoria, Australia
Dr Joe Power Queensland, Australia
Professor Fritz Puhringer Germany
Mr Guy Rees South Australia, Australia
Associate Professor Bernadette Richards South Australia, Australia
Dr Paul Richards South Australia, Australia
Dr Bernhard Riedel Victoria, Australia
Dr Lindy Roberts Western Australia, Australia
Dr Kathryn Robinson South Australia, Australia
Professor Paul Rolan South Australia, Australia
Dr Michael Rose New South Wales, Australia
Associate Professor David Roxby South Australia, Australia
Dr Brett Sampson South Australia, Australia
Mr Jonathan Schauder Victoria, Australia
Professor Lambert Schuwirth South Australia, Australia
Associate Professor David Scott Victoria, Australia
Dr Roger Sexton South Australia, Australia
Dr Scott Simmons Victoria, Australia
Dr Ajay Sinhal South Australia, Australia
Professor Jamie Sleigh Hamilton, New Zealand
Dr Erica Sloan Victoria, Australia
Dr William Smith South Australia, Australia
Professor Greg Snell Victoria, Australia
Professor Andrew Somogyi South Australia, Australia
Dr Brian Spain Northern Territory, Australia
Mr John Spillane Victoria, Australia
Mr Peter Stephenson New South Wales, Australia
Professor David A Story Victoria, Australia
Associate Professor Steve Stranks South Australia, Australia
Dr Rhonda Stuart Victoria, Australia
Dr Richard Sullivan Victoria, Australia
Dr Jo Sutherland New South Wales, Australia
Dr Suyin Tan New South Wales, Australia
Dr Andrew Thomas South Australia, Australia
Dr Sally Tideman South Australia, Australia
Dr Christopher Verco South Australia, Australia
Dr Britta Von Ungern-Sternberg Western Australia, Australia
Dr Pauline Wake National Capital District, Papua New Guinea
Dr Nicholas Waldron Western Australia, Australia
Dr Alistair Walker South Australia, Australia
Dr Ivan Ward South Australia, Australia
Professor Morgyn Warner South Australia, Australia
Associate Professor Jennifer Weller Auckland, New Zealand
Dr Ubbo Wiersema South Australia, Australia
Dr David Wilkinson South Australia, Australia
Dr Janette Wright Victoria, Australia
Dr Yatin Young Auckland, New Zealand
Professor Graeme Young South Australia, Australia
Dr Rob Young South Australia, Australia
Associate Professor Andrew Zacest South Australia, Australia
WORKSHOP AND SMALL GROUP
DISCUSSION FACILITATORS
Dr Christopher Acott South Australia, Australia
Dr Marion Andrew South Australia, Australia
Dr Merv Atkinson South Australia, Australia
Dr Rachelle Augustes South Australia, Australia
Dr Adam Badenoch South Australia, Australia
Dr Dave Barker South Australia, Australia
Dr Pat Belperio South Australia, Australia
Dr Susmita Bhattacharya New South Wales, Australia
Dr Phil Blum Northern Territory, Australia
Dr Kelly Bratkovic South Australia, Australia
Dr Alison Brereton South Australia, Australia
Dr Christopher Bowden Victoria, Australia
Dr David Cardone South Australia, Australia
Dr Damien Castanelli Victoria, Australia
Dr Rani Chahal Victoria, Australia
Dr Rick Champion South Australia, Australia
Dr Giresh Chandran South Australia, Australia
Mr Matthew Chapman South Australia, Australia
Dr William Cheng South Australia, Australia
Dr Evelyn Cheng South Australia, Australia
Dr Helena Choi New South Wales, Australia
Dr Jason Chou Victoria, Australia
Dr Richard Church South Australia, Australia
Dr Jonathan Clarke South Australia, Australia
Dr David Costi South Australia, Australia
Dr Faith Crichton South Australia, Australia
Dr Nicola Crowley South Australia, Australia
Dr Allan Cyna South Australia, Australia
Dr Oliver David South Australia, Australia
Associate Professor Andrew Davidson Victoria, Australia
Dr Kate Drummond South Australia, Australia
Ms Di Edwards South Australia, Australia
Dr Yasmin Endlich South Australia, Australia
Dr Julianne Evans South Australia, Australia
Dr Cormac Fahy South Australia, Australia
Dr Jeremy Fernando Queensland, Australia
Dr Bernd Froessler South Australia, Australia
Dr Michael Goldblatt South Australia, Australia
Ms Karen Goulding Victoria, Australia
Dr James Hafner South Australia, Australia
Dr Josh Hayes South Australia, Australia
Mr Maurice Hennessy Victoria, Australia
Dr Irina Hollington South Australia, Australia
Dr Elizabeth Inaido-Lee National Capital District, Papua New Gunea
Dr Simon James South Australia, Australia
Dr Simon Jenkins South Australia, Australia
Dr Diana Khursandi Queensland, Australia
Dr Sarika Kumar South Australia, Australia
Dr Jason Koerber South Australia, Australia
Dr Zoe Lagana South Australia, Australia
Dr Rob Laing South Australia, Australia
Dr Stewart Lake South Australia, Australia
Dr Andrew Lavender South Australia, Australia
Professor Kate Leslie Victoria, Australia
Dr John Leyden New South Wales, Australia
Dr Robin Limb South Australia, Australia
Dr Kristen Llewelyn South Australia, Australia
Dr James London South Australia, Australia
Dr Graham Lowry South Australia, Australia
Dr Sam Lumb South Australia, Australia
Dr Simon Macklin South Australia, Australia
Dr Devan Mahadevan South Australia, Australia
Dr Cameron Main South Australia, Australia
Dr Mark Markou South Australia, Australia
Dr Nich Marks South Australia, Australia
Dr Paul McAleer South Australia, Australia
Dr Kirsten McCulloch South Australia, Australia
Dr David McLeod South Australia, Australia
Ms Ann McPhedran South Australia, Australia
Dr Jo Melick South Australia, Australia
Ms Louise Merrigan South Australia, Australia
Dr Rod Mitchell South Australia, Australia
Dr Wayne Morriss Christchurch, New Zealand
Dr Graham Morton Auckland, New Zealand
Dr Jamin Mulvey Calgary, Canada
Dr Nagesh Nanjappa South Australia, Australia
Dr Kuan Lee Ng South Australia, Australia
Dr Dick Ongley Auckland, New Zealand
Dr Shona Osborn South Australia, Australia
Dr Bruce Paix South Australia, Australia
Dr Frank Parker South Australia, Australia
Dr Tony Pearce South Australia, Australia
Associate Professor Andrew Pearce South Australia, Australia
Dr Chris Perry South Australia, Australia
Dr Tim Porter Victoria, Australia
Dr Justin Porter South Australia, Australia
Dr Andrew Puddy South Australia, Australia
Professor Fritz Puhringer Germany
Dr Nic Randall Auckland, New Zealand
Associate Professor Bernadette Richards South Australia, Australia
Dr Paul Richards South Australia, Australia
Dr Lindy Roberts Western Australia, Australia
Dr Kathryn Robinson South Australia, Australia
Dr Kaushik Saha South Australia, Australia
Dr David Sainsbury South Australia, Australia
Associate Professor David Scott Victoria, Australia
Dr Agnieska Sczremska South Australia, Australia
Dr Richard Semenov South Australia, Australia
Dr Tim Semple South Australia, Australia
Dr Natalie Smith New South Wales, Australia
Dr Kylie Stanton South Australia, Australia
Dr Tish Stefanutto New South Wales, Australia
Dr Heather Stevens South Australia, Australia
Professor David Story Victoria, Australia
Dr Joel Symons Victoria, Australia
Dr Agnieszka Szremska South Australia, Australia
Dr Suyin Tan New South Wales, Australia
Dr Fiona Tavener South Australia, Australia
Dr Matthew Thomas South Australia, Australia
Dr Sam Tong South Australia, Australia
Dr Helen Vlachtsis South Australia, Australia
Dr Richard Walsh South Australia, Australia
Dr Pauline Wake Papua New Guinea
Dr Ivan Ward South Australia, Australia
Dr Donna Wilmot South Australia, Australia
Dr Emily Yeoh New South Wales, Australia
Dr Rob Young South Australia, Australia
Dr Alex Zanker South Australia, Australia
9
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EXPERIENCE THE
BRIDION EFFECT
PBS Information: This product is not listed on the PBS.
Before prescribing please refer to Product Information. Product Information
is available from MSD or by accessing www.msdinfo.com.au/bridionpi
Minimum Product Information for BRIDION® (sugammadex) Indications: Reversal of neuromuscular blockade induced by rocuronium or vecuronium. Dosage &
Administration: Routine reversal in adults, children and adolescents, elderly, obese patients, patients with mild and moderate renal impairment, patients with hepatic impairment:
4.0 mg/kg IV, if recovery was reached 1-2 post-tetanic counts (PTC); 2.0 mg/kg IV, if spontaneous recovery has occurred up to reappearance of T2 following rocuronium- or
vecuronium-induced blockade. Reversals other than reversal of blockade by rocuronium are not recommended in children and adolescents. Immediate reversal in adults, elderly,
obese patients, patients with mild and moderate renal impairment, patients with hepatic impairment: 16.0 mg/kg IV, three minutes following administration of rocuronium
(1.2 mg/kg). Contraindications: Hypersensitivity to sugammadex or to any of the excipients. Precautions: Repeated exposure in patients; respiratory function monitoring
during recovery, use for reversal of neuromuscular blocking agents other than rocuronium or vecuronium; coagulopathy; severe renal impairment; severe hepatic impairment;
marked bradycardia*; use in ICU; hypersensitivity reactions (including anaphylactic reactions); pregnancy (Category B2); lactation; infants less than 2 years of age including
neonates; prolonged neuromuscular blockade (sub-optimal doses) and delayed recovery. Interactions: Potential identified with toremifene, hormonal contraception. Could
interfere with progesterone assay and some coagulation parameters. Adverse Reactions: Dysgeusia, prolonged neuromuscular blockade, anaesthetic complication (restoration
of neuromuscular function), hypersensitivity reactions varying from isolated skin reactions to serious systemic reactions (i.e anaphylaxis), bronchospasm and pulmonary obstructive
events*. Severe hypersensitivity reactions can be fatal. Events associated with surgical procedures under general anaesthesia. Isolated cases of marked bradycardia and
bradycardia with cardiac arrest*. Based on PI amended 11 February 2014.
*Please note changes in the Product Information.
Copyright © 2015 Merck Sharp & Dohme B.V. a Subsidiary of Merck & Co. Inc., Kenilworth, New Jersey, USA. All rights reserved. Merck
Sharp & Dohme (Australia) Pty Limited. Level 1, Building A, 26 Talavera Road Macquarie Park, NSW 2113 Australia. First Issued March
2015. ANES-1131625-0018. Wellcom Agency 430601_210x297.
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM AND HIGHLIGHTS
SATURDAY MAY 2, 2015
MORNING
HALL K
7.30-8am
Twitter 101: Spreading your wings - Dr Jo Sutherland
HALL L/M
8.15-8.30am
Opening address and welcome ceremony
HALL L/M
8.30-10am
Ellis Gillespie Lecture
Chair: Dr Genevieve Goulding, ANZCA President
Professor Rupert Pearse (ANZCA ASM Visitor) – Perioperative medicine: the future of anaesthesia?
Michael Cousins Lecture
Chair Professor Ted Shipton, FPM Dean
Professor Irene Tracey (FPM ASM Visitor) – Imaging analgesia and anaesthesia
10-10.30am
Morning tea, healthcare industry exhibition, College Ceremony rehearsal (Hall L/M)
10.30am-noon
noon-1.30pm
12
HALL L/M
HALL G
HALL J
P1/P2/P3
HALL K
C1/C2
REFER TO PAGE 30
REFER TO PAGE 33
Perioperative medicine SIG - the
perioperative ‘F’ word! Frailty:
often used but less understood
Airway SIG
Anaesthesia and the cancer
patient
If it matters, it causes
controversy
Trauma SIG
Pain and the elderly
WORKSHOPS
SGDs
Chair:
Dr Simon Macklin
W01A: Emergency
anaesthesia/ALS
W05A: Paediatric airway
management
W09A: Basic transthoracic
echo
W21A: Overseas work and
development
SGD06: The patient with
pulmonary hypertension for
non cardiac surgery
SGD13: Eye lists made easier
SGD49: Fun with pregnant
Fontans
Chair: Dr Graham Morton
Chair: Dr Richard Semenov
Chair: Dr Bernhard Riedel
Definition and measurement
Dr Yatin Young
Perioperative implications
Professor David Story
Frailty for the fearless
anaesthetist
Dr Nicholas Waldron
Airway training in Papua
New Guinea
Dr Yasmin Endlich
The development of airway
management in patients with
head and neck lesions over the
past five years
Dr Pauline Wake
Nasal endoscopy for
anaesthetists
Mr Guy Rees
Airway problems in recovery
Professor Fritz Puhringer
Cancer tsunami: emerging
trends, societal cost and
preoperative implications
Dr Bernhard Riedel
Cancer biology - a primer for
anaesthetists
Mr David Gyorki
Translational research: the
tumor-neuro-inflammatory
response and cancer recurrence
Dr Erica Sloan
Surgical perspectives: patient
selection, timing of surgery,
multidisciplinary care
Mr John Spillane
Non-anaesthetist
sedation: a UK
perspective
Professor Robert
Sneyd
See the light! Put
the Macintosh
laryngoscope in the
museum
Dr John Currie
Futility of care
Dr Chris Drummond
Chair: Associate
Professor
John Moloney
Do we really
need to not
move the neck
one millimetre in
trauma patients?
Associate
Professor
John Moloney
Common cervical
fractures:
mechanisms,
radiology
and clinical
significance
Dr Adam
Osomanski
Chair: Dr Andrew Wilkinson
Comprehensive geriatric
assessment: identifying
and managing multiple comorbidities
Dr Jeffery Faunt
Behavioural and
psychological symptoms
of pain in persons with
dementia
Professor Stephen Gibson
Pain in older patients: a
multidimensional approach
to management
Dr David Lussier
Lunch, healthcare industry exhibition, FPM Trainee Luncheon (L3), ANZCA Trainee Luncheon (Panorama Suite)
SGD01, SGD22, SGD43 (12.15-1.15pm)
13
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM AND HIGHLIGHTS
SATURDAY MAY 2, 2015
AFTERNOON
1.30-3pm
3-3.30pm
3.30-5pm
6-11.30pm
14
HALL L/M
HALL G
HALL J
P1/P2/P3
HALL K
C1/C2
REFER TO PAGE 30
REFER TO PAGE 33
R5
Perioperative medicine cardiology: the pipes and drums
Obstetric anaesthesia SIG - the
complex obstetric patient
Anaesthesia and the cancer
patient
It’s not brain surgery…
Regional
anaesthesia SIG
The flaming face
(neuroinflammation)
WORKSHOPS
SGDs
Moderated ePoster session:
Systems and safety
Chair: Dr William Cheng
Chair: Dr Pete Smith
Chair: Dr Tim Semple
Chair:
Dr Andrew Puddy
Chair: Dr Nicholas
Knight
Chair: Dr Kieran Davis
Cardiac preoptimisation
Dr Dale Ashby
What’s new in cardiology? The
plumber
Dr Ajay Sinhal
What’s new in cardiology? The
electrician
Associate Professor Andrew
McGavigan
Maternal morbidity and
mortality: an update
Associate Professor Alicia Dennis
The use of ROTEM to target
blood use during obstetric
haemorrhage
Dr Roger Browning
The challenges of obstetric
anaesthesia in 2015 - the nonEnglish speaking background
patient
Dr Kym Osborn
Cancer therapies: perioperative
implications
Dr Hilmy Ismail
Anaesthetic strategies for the
cancer patient - opioid sparing
techniques and cox-II inhibitors
Dr Jonathan Hiller
Pain in the cancer patient: where
are we in 2015?
Dr Richard Sullivan
Futile surgery and end of life care
Dr Zoe Keon-Cohen
Code stroke
Dr Jim Jannes
Updates on the
management of
severe traumatic
brain injury
Professor Tomás
Corcoran
Beginners guide
to interventional
neuroradiology - what
does my anaesthetist
need to know?
Dr Steve Chryssidis
What’s new in
neuroanaesthesia?
Dr Douglas Fahlbusch
What’s new
in ophthalmic
blocks?
Dr Jon Clarke
A joint
arthroplasty fast
track protocol:
implementation
and results
Dr Andrew
Czuchwicki
Ultra long
acting liposomal
packaged local
anaesthetic
Dr David McLeod
Neuroinflammation in
affective disorders
Professor Bernhard Baune
Update on Glia
Professor Mark Hutchinson
MicroRNAs, exosomes as
markers
in pain states
Professor Rainer Haberberger
W01B: Emergency
anaesthesia/ALS
W05B: Paediatric airway
management
W07A: Fibreoptic
W09A: Basic transthoracic
echo
continued
W19A: Practical hypnosis for
the busy anaesthetist
W22A: Process
communication model:
“Key2Me”
SGD21: Beam me up Scotty!
Transporting the morbidly
obese
SGD23: Getting started in
research
SGD30: Performance issues
SGD42: Management of the
opiate addicted patient for
beginners
Refer to page 26
REFER TO PAGE 30
REFER TO PAGE 33
R5
SGDs
Trainee ePoster
prize session
Afternoon tea, healthcare industry exhibition
HALL L/M
HALL G
HALL J
P1/P2/P3
HALL K
C1/C2
Perioperative medicine endocrine: it’s all in the glands
Civilian medical assistance after
natural disasters
Perioperative management of
bowel cancer patients
Patient outcomes:
what affects
morbidity and
mortality?
History of
anaesthesia SIG
Acute pain SIG: the influence WORKSHOPS
of psychological factors on
acute pain
Chair: Professor David Story
Chair: Dr Gareth Lyttle
Chair: Ms Liz Murphy
Chair:
Professor Kate Leslie
Chair:
Dr Chris Ball
Chair:
Professor Stephan Schug
Perioperative management of
diabetes
Associate Professor Steve Stranks
Bariatric surgery and diabetes
Mr Jacob Chisholm
The NET effect: perioperative
issues when dealing with
secretory tumours of the
gastrointestinal tract
Dr Andrew Thomas
History of international
medical aid responses to
natural disasters - what we’ve
learnt over two decades
Dr Phil Blum
Activation of Australia’s
medical assistance teams in
response to natural disasters how it happens
Dr Brian Spain
Civilian surgical field hospital
- the AusMAT response to
typhoon haiyan in Tacloban,
Philippines
Dr Andrew Fenton
The role of anaesthetists
outside the operating theatre
in disaster response
Dr Dan Holmes
Diet and colorectal cancer
Professor Graeme Young
Haematinic optimisation
Dr Kathryn Robinson
ERAS protocols and outcome
Mr Paul Hollington
Scoring systems and
predicting outcome the evidence
Dr Ivan Ward
Prevention is better
than cure - what
can anaesthetists
do about early
postoperative
morbidity and
mortality?
Professor Guy
Ludbrook
The death of
surgery, and other
outcomes
Professor Guy
Maddern
Perioperative
outcome: fads and
fashion in the US
Associate Professor
Gregory Crosby
History of airway
management
Dr Chris Acott
Eye blocks past
and present
Dr Jon Clarke
The history of
simulation and
anaesthesia
Professor Harry
Owen
What do we see - clinically?
Dr Christine Huxtable
What do we see - on fMRI?
Professor Irene Tracey
Drawing your line in the
sand
Dr Faizur Noore
W01C: Emergency
anaesthesia/ALS
W06A: Neonatal
resuscitation workshop for
the rural anaesthetist
W07B: Fibreoptic
W19A: Practical hypnosis
for the busy anaesthetist
continued
W21B: Overseas work and
development
W22A: Process
communication model:
“Key2Me” continued
SGD02: TAVI in the nonRefer to page 26
hybrid theatre
SGD25: Navigating the ethics
committee
SGD34: Understanding the
emotional patient
SGD44: Beads, peanuts, coins
and batteries- the challenges
of inhaled or swallowed
foreign bodies in paediatric
anaesthesia
College Ceremony (Hall L/M) and Reception (Art Gallery of South Australia)
15
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM AND HIGHLIGHTS
SUNDAY MAY 3, 2015
MORNING
7-8.15am
Sponsored breakfast session one (BS01) and two (BS02) (refer to page 38)
HALL L/M
8.30-10am
Mary Burnell Lecture
Chair: Dr Genevieve Goulding, ANZCA President
Professor Tomás Corcoran (Australasian Visitor) – Perioperative inflammation and patient outcomes:
is anaesthesia an innocent bystander?
FPM SA Visitor’s Lecture
Chair: Professor Ted Shipton, FPM Dean
Dr David Lussier (FPM SA Visitor) – Management of the elderly - pain and drugs: what you need to know
Dr Michal Kluger – 2016 ASM Auckland launch
10-10.30am
Morning tea, healthcare industry exhibition
10.30am-noon
noon-1.30pm
16
HALL L/M
HALL G
P1/P2/P3
HALL K
C1/C2
REFER TO PAGE 30
REFER TO PAGE 33
R5
Perioperative medicine
Special ANZAC centenary history Wearable technology - looking
SIG
through the lens with a clinical
view
HALL J
Obstetric anaesthesia
SIG - regional
anaesthesia and
obstetrics
ACCUTE SIG
FPM Dean’s Prize and
Best Free Paper Session
WORKSHOPS
SGDs
Open ePoster prize session
Chair: Dr Mark Priestley
Chair: Dr Chris Ball
Chair: Dr Simon Jenkins
Chair: Dr Jane Brown
Chair:
Dr Jamin Mulvey
Chair:
Professor Milton Cohen
Epidemiology of the high risk
surgical patient
Professor Rupert Pearse
Puff and buff: perioperative
lung function and optimisation
Dr Jason D’Costa
Perioperative management of
obstructive sleep apnoea
Dr Alistair Walker
Gum acacia and the
development of
resuscitation fluids
Dr Martin Graves
History and advances in military
anaesthesia training
Dr Michael Lumsden-Steel
The Geneva Conventions:
protecting military medical
personnel
Dr George Merridew
Returning home
Dr Simon Hendel
Head-mounted display case
study presentation
Dr David Liu
Wearable technology overview
Mr Peter Stephenson (MSD)
Google glass case study
presentation
Dr Adam Osomanski
Panel including Twitter ‘Rapid
Fire’ Q&A
Panellists: Dr Adam Osomanski,
Dr David Liu, Dr Simon Jenkins,
Dr Thien LeCong
Transthoracic
echocardiography
assessment of
cardiac output at
caesarean section
under spinal
anaesthesia
Dr Eoin Casey
Communication and
consent for regional
anaesthesia in
obstetrics
Dr Allan Cyna
The use of
ultrasound in
regional anaesthesia
in obstetric
anaesthesia
Dr Chris Mitchell
Paediatric
retrieval for
the generalist
retrievalist
Dr Michael
Corkeron
Assume the
brace position.
This is not a
drill. Safety in
pre-hospital and
aeromedical
retrieval
Dr Stefan Mazur
MBA and
tracheal injury:
what could
possibly go
wrong?
Dr Mat Hope
Dean’s Prize:
Survey of Chronic Pain
in Shiraz: Prevalence,
treatments and satisfaction
with treatments
Dr Vahid Mohabbati
An audit of intrathecal
infusion catheter with
subcutaneous port in the
management of severe pain
in patients with cancer
Dr Preeti Ananda Krishnan
Best Free Paper:
Pitfalls to making sense in
pain medicine
Dr John Quintner
Morphine requirements
in recovery after total
knee arthroplasty: A study
comparing local infiltrative
analgesia (LIA) versus
regional blocks in our local
practice
Dr Matthew Cheaveau
60,000+ years and 12
papers: a systematic
review of pain assessment,
experience and
management in Aboriginal
Australian people
Dr Luke Arthur
W01D: Emergency
anaesthesia/ALS
W03C: Anaphylaxis crisis
management
W08A: Tracheostomy
W10A: Advanced
transthoracic echo
W24A: Supervisor of
training (SoT)- the changing
face of the SoT
SGD04: The adventurous
bronchoscopist
SGD29: Moving from
clinical practice to academic
teaching
SGD40: Approaches and
considerations for the acute
and chronic liver failure
patient
SGD48: New opioids and the
anaesthetist
Refer to page 26
Lunch, healthcare industry exhibition, FPM AGM (noon-12.30pm) C1/C2,
sponsored lunchtime session one (LS01) and two (LS02) (refer to page 38)
SGD14, SGD15, SGD17, SGD19 (12.15-1.15pm)
17
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM AND HIGHLIGHTS
SUNDAY MAY 3, 2015
AFTERNOON
1.30-3pm
HALL L/M
HALL G
Postoperative/PACU problem
prevention
Special ANZAC centenary history
SIG
Chair: Dr Roelof Van Wijk
Failure to wake in recovery:
differential diagnosis and action
checklist
Dr James London
Fully sick: evidence based
management of persistent
PONV
Dr Sam Lumb
Tips and tricks for the
management of persistent pain
in the PACU
Dr Ravi Cooray
Incidence of PDPH at Port
Moresby General Hospital
Dr Elizabeth Inaido-Lee
3-3.30pm
3.30-5pm
Chair: Dr Bruce Paix
Operation ‘Slipper’- lessons
learned
Dr Toby Thomas
Aeromedical evacuation
Dr Allan MacKillop
My path to anaesthesia
Dr Alex Douglas
HALL J
P1/P2/P3
Paediatric anaesthesia
Communication in
anaesthesia SIG panel discussion
Chair: Dr David Sainsbury
Chair: Dr David Elliott
Five papers that have changed
paediatric anaesthesia practice
Dr Catherine Olweny
Emergence agitation: new
solutions to an old problem
Dr David Costi
Massive transfusion: do you
treat children the same?
Dr Nich Marks
The use of invasive
placebo when
investigating regional
block efficacy:
communicating
good science or bad
science? Ethical or
unethical?
Early warning
systems versus
professional clinical
assessments for
communicating
deteriorating patient
care: helpful or
harmful?
Compulsory drug
labels for syringes
when communicating
with oneself:
essential for patient
safety?
Panellists: Dr Lindy
Roberts, Professor
Alan Merry, Dr
Suyin Tan, Associate
Professor
Scott Simmons
HALL J
P1/P2/P3
HALL K
Right heart failure
Chair:
Dr David Daly
Pathophysiology
of pulmonary
hypertension
Dr Dana Pakrou
Evaluation
and clinical
management of
right heart failure
Dr Majo Joseph
Acute
intraoperative
management of
right heart failure
Dr Thomas Painter
C1/C2
REFER TO PAGE 30
REFER TO PAGE 33
R5
Changing face - facial pain
WORKSHOPS
SGDs
Moderated ePoster session:
Other
Headaches: primary pain
problem usually with good
outcomes
Professor Paul Rolan
Psychiatric aspects of facial
pain and headache
Dr Peter Herriot
Surgical options for facial
pain and headache
Associate Professor Andrew
Zacest
W01E: Emergency
anaesthesia/ALS
W08B: Tracheostomy
W10A: Advanced
transthoracic echo
continued
W12A: Upper limb
W13A: Lower limb
W14A: Abdominal wall
W15A: Neuroaxial and
paravertebral
W16A: Ophthalmic blocks
W22B: Process
communication model:
“Key2Me”
SGD16: Perioperative
thromboprophylaxis:
expanding the role of
anaesthetists in risk
reduction and quality
improvement
SGD20: Practical aspects of
IV iron prescribing, dosing
and administration for the
anaesthetist
SGD24: Getting your
research published
SGD47: Acute neuropathic
pain
Refer to page 26
C1/C2
REFER TO PAGE 30
REFER TO PAGE 33
R5
IT and the pain specialist
WORKSHOPS
SGDs
Moderated ePoster session:
Perioperative medicine
W01F: Emergency
anaesthesia/ALS
W02A: Cricothyrotomy
W12B: Upper limb
W13B: Lower limb
W14B: Abdominal wall
W15B: Neuroaxial and
paravertebral
W16B: Ophthalmic blocks
W22B: Process
communication model:
“Key2Me” continued
SGD09: Nonpharmacological anxiolysis
- Vegas style
SGD12: Where neurologist
and anaesthetist may clash:
anaesthesia for acute stroke
SGD50: The ABC of
pregnancy
Refer to page 26
Chair: Dr Bruce Rounsefell
Afternoon tea, healthcare industry exhibition
HALL L/M
HALL G
Australia and New Zealand
Anaesthetic Allergy Group
(ANZAAG)
Special ANZAC centenary history Trainee academic prize session
SIG
Chair: Dr Paul McAleer
Chair: Dr Martin Graves
Pure science: mast cells,
tryptase & mastocytosis
Dr William Smith
Clinical: anaesthesia for
mastocystosis patients
Dr Michelle Mulligan
Emerging: perioperative
management of the
chlorhexidine free patient
Dr Michael Rose
Military medicine in the first
year of WWI
Dr Christopher Verco
The ADF military medic in
Afghanistan: an overview
Dr Bruce Paix
State of the art: lessons learned
in Iraq and Afghanistan
Commander Corey Kucik US
Navy
HALL K
Safety and quality:
while on a ladder,
never step back to
admire your work!
It’s hypothetical…
Indigenous health
discussion
Chair: Associate Professor
Michael Bennett
Chair: Professor
Guy Ludbrook
Chair:
Dr Penny Stewart
Chair: Dr Matthew Green
Acute risk change for cardiothoracic admissions to
intensive care (ARCTIC): a
novel, more sensitive measure
of perioperative quality in
cardiac surgery
Dr Tim Coulson
Is the more manageable Maori
mouth a myth?
Dr Martin Bailey
Communication during
antacid administration prior to
Caesarean section
Dr Ravi Cooray
Contamination of ready-for–
use airway equipment before
and after workflow change: a
cross-sectional study
Dr Alison Jackson
An audit of peri-operative
hypothermia at the Royal
Melbourne Hospital
Dr Madeline Lim
A safety check prior to regional
anaesthesia to prevent wrong
sided blocks
Dr Paul Slocombe
The latest
anaesthetic incident
data from webAIRS
Professor Martin
Culwick
What is revalidation?
Is it useful, is there
any point?
Professor Robert
Sneyd
Perilous pitfalls of
protocols
Dr Merv Atkinson
Panel discussion:
including
clinicians,
Aboriginal liaison,
public health
clinician, MIGA
solicitor, director
of medical
services
Targeting IT to your
demographic
Dr Chris Hayes
Lessons from brain man
Ms Laura Gallagher
Websites for pain: what is
out there, what works and
building your own
Dr Susan Evans
HALL L/M
5-5.30pm
ANZCA AGM
HALL H
5.30-7pm
18
HCI reception
19
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM AND HIGHLIGHTS
MONDAY MAY 4, 2015
MORNING
7-8.15am
Sponsored breakfast session three (BS03) and four (BS04) (refer to page 38)
HALL L/M
8.30-10am
Gilbert Brown Prize Session
Chair: Professor Alan Merry
Epigenetic changes induced by morphine can affect opiate choice for cancer pain therapy
Dr Dean Bunbury
Validity of the thromboelastometry fibrinogen assay measured during cardiopulmonary bypass in cardiac surgery: a
retrospective, single centre, observational study
Dr Hamish Mace
Maximum surgical blood ordering schedule for adult elective surgeries in Auckland District Health Board (ADHB)
Dr Chang Joon Kim
A comparison of the Glidescope®, the McGrath® and the Macintosh laryngoscopes in a simulated difficult airway with
bleeding in an airway mannequin
Dr Suyen Ho
Assessment of post-implementation compliance with a Surgical Thrombo-Embolism Prevention protocol: the STEP protocol
Dr Rani Chahal
10-10.30am
Morning tea, healthcare industry exhibition
10.30am-noon
noon-1.30pm
20
HALL L/M
HALL J
P1/P2/P3
HALL K
C1/C2
REFER TO PAGE 30
REFER TO PAGE 33
R5
The painful truth
What harm are we doing?
Intensive care medicine
The highs and lows
of tissue oxygenation
Developments and
new directions in
cardiopulmonary
bypass - Cardiothoracic,
Vascular and Perfusion
SIG
WORKSHOPS
SGDs
Moderated ePoster session:
Obstetrics
W01G: Emergency anaesthesia/ALS
W02B: Cricothyrotomy
W17A: Supraclavicular subclavian
vein cannulation using ultrasound
(ACCUTE SIG)
W24B: Supervisor of training (SoT)the changing face of the SoT
SGD33: The expert trap
SDG35: Difficult airways a PFY
experience
SGD39: Obstetrics and obesity for
beginners
SGD45: Tips and tricks: the opioidtolerant patient with acute pain
Refer to page 26
Chair: Dr Meredith Craigie
Chair: Dr Chris Jackson
Chair: Dr Mark Finnis
Chair: Dr Sam Willis
Chair: Dr Tom Painter
Why is pain still under - treated
in the emergency department?
Two new hypotheses
Dr Drew Carter
The immune system in pain
Associate Professor Mark
Hutchinson
New strategies for the
treatment of pain
Professor Paul Rolan
Pharmacogenomics and
anaesthesia and analgesia
Professor Andrew Somogyi
Medical innovation: benefit or
harm?
Associate Professor Bernadette
Richards
Harm and anaesthesia beyond
neurotoxicity
Dr Britta Von Ungern-Sternberg
Perioperative brain failure: the
gas, the knife and the patient
Associate Professor Gregory
Crosby
The ARISE study and EGDT in
sepsis
Dr Sandra Peake
The OPTiMiSE trial
Professor Rupert Pearse
Acute kidney injury
Dr Mark Finnis
Cellular response to
hypoxia
Dr Dan Peet
Hyperoxia
Professor Robert
Sneyd
Hyperoxia during
cardiac surgery:
friend or foe?
Dr Rob Young
Cardiopulmonary
bypass: embracing
evidence-based
practice
Associate Professor Rob
Baker
Intraoperative blood
management in cardiac
surgery
Associate Professor
David A Scott
Coagulation monitoring
and cardiopulmonary
bypass - more than the
ACT
Dr Joe Power
Lunch, healthcare industry exhibition, Retired Anaesthetists’ Luncheon (Panorama Suite),
sponsored lunchtime session three (LS03) (refer to page 38)
SGD03, SGD05, SGD37, SGD51 (12.15-1.15pm)
21
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM AND HIGHLIGHTS
MONDAY MAY 4, 2015
AFTERNOON
1.30-3pm
3-3.30pm
3.30-5pm
HALL L/M
HALL J
P1/P2/P3
HALL K
C1/C2
REFER TO PAGE 30
REFER TO PAGE 33
ANZCA clinical trials network 1:
Late breaking trials
Paediatric anaesthesia:
a growing problem
Intensive care medicine
Organ and tissue
donation and
transplant
Diving and hyperbaric medicine SIG
WORKSHOPS
SGDs
W01H: Emergency anaesthesia/ALS
W02C: Cricothyrotomy
W03A: Anaphylaxis crisis management
W04A: Trauma: lessons from the pointy end
W20A: Home brew and open source web based
software- software development for education
and administration in a busy anaesthetic
department
SGD07: Is transthoracic echocardiography for
you?
SGD08: Decision making in perioperative
resuscitation
SGD31: Building a happy department
SGD32: How green is my anaesthetic?
Chair: Associate Professor
Phillip Peyton
Chair: Dr David Barker
Chair: Dr Toby Thomas
Chair: Dr Rod Mitchell
Chair: Dr Suzie Szekely
N2O and chronic pain
Professor Matthew Chan
ENIGMA 2 one year follow up
study
Professor Kate Leslie
ATACAS - the aspirin results
Professor Paul Myles
The environmental impact of a
paediatric anaesthetist
Dr Chris Perry
Anaesthesia for obese children:
the growing epidemic
Dr Balvinder Kaur
Bariatric surgery in adolescents
Mr Sanjeev Khurana
Tips and tricks for ventilating
the difficult lung
Dr Simon Hockley
Blood glucose control on the
ICU
Dr Adam Deane
ECMO
Dr Ubbo Wiersema
The state of the
nation: an update
on organ and tissue
donation in Australia
Dr Sally Tideman
Advances in liver
transplant surgery
Dr Mark BrookeSmith
Donation after
cardiac death
Dr Brett Sampson
Scuba diving and persistent patent
foramen ovale: how to surprise a
cardiologist
Associate Professor Michael Bennett
Hyperbaric oxygen improves insulin
action
Dr David Wilkinson
Afternoon tea, healthcare industry exhibition
HALL L/M
HALL J
P1/P2/P3
HALL K
C1/C2
REFER TO PAGE 30
REFER TO PAGE 33
ANZCA clinical trials network 2:
Keys to successful recruiting
Changing our thinking
Intensive care medicine
Organ and tissue
donation and
transplant
Optimising resources in the
healthcare system
WORKSHOPS
SGDs
Chair: Professor Kate Leslie
Chair: Dr Lindy Roberts
Chair: Dr Mark Finnis
Chair: Dr Peter Lillie
Chair: TBA
Ethical persuasion
Mr Jonathan Schauder
How to design a feasible RCT
Professor Paul Myles
Recruiting to RCT’s evidence
and practice
Dr Thomas Painter
Psychological effects of stress
Professor Anna Chur-Hansen
Effective communication
Dr Allan Cyna
The vortex approach
Dr Nick Chrimes
Steroids and thyroid hormone
in illness
Dr Matt Maiden
Update on nutrition and energy
delivery during critical illness
Associate Professor Marianne
Chapman
Rationalisation of intensive and
critical care
Dr Gerry O’Callaghan
Cardiac transplant: a
surgical and anaesthetic update
Mr Kumud Dhital and
Dr Andrew Jackson
Thoracic transplant:
a surgical and anaesthetic update
Professor Greg Snell
and Dr David Daly
Optimising donor
management, organ
retrieval and the pretransplant patient
Panel discussion
Reducing waste and optimising
value in healthcare
Associate Professor Adam Elshaug
Decision making under uncertainty
Dr Matthew Anstey
Health economics and older people
in the 21st century
Dr Billingsley Kaambwa
W01I: Emergency anaesthesia/ALS
W02D: Cricothyrotomy
W03B: Anaphylaxis crisis management
W04B: Trauma: lessons from the pointy end
W11A: Pre-hospital ultrasound (ACCUTE SIG)
W23B: The prescribing anaesthetist in the
perioperative period - what’s interfering and
what’s not?
SGD11: Getting to the heart of perioperative
myocardial injury in non cardiac surgery
SGD28: Monsters in the mind
SGD36: Teaching anaesthetic skills... the blind
leading the blind
SGD41: The troubleshooting epidural
HALL F/G
7-midnight
22
Gala dinner
23
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM AND HIGHLIGHTS
TUESDAY MAY 5, 2015
9-10.30am
10.30-11am
HALL L/M
C1/C2
HALL J
HALL K
REFER TO PAGE 30
REFER TO PAGE 33
The bleeding truth: haematology and the
anaesthetist
Mathematical modelling for...
Management SIG:
transformations in health and the
perioperative surgical home
Welfare of anaesthetists SIG - Titanic
professional issues: time to stop
moving the deckchairs
WORKSHOPS
SGDs
Chair: Dr Bernd Froessler
Chair: Associate Professor Michael Jones
Chair: Dr Vanessa Beavis
Chair: Dr Marion Andrew
Point of care - is there an ideal device?
Associate Professor David Roxby
Non invasive Hb monitoring in paediatrics
Dr Cormac Fahy
Perioperative issues and uncommon
haematological disorders
Dr Simon McRae
Intraoperative massive blood transfusion
Dr Paul Richards
Theatre scheduling: how to get your
timing right
Dr Mark Markou
Climate sensitive diseases: using climate
forecasts to extend predictive lead time
Dr Rachel Lowe
The CNS effects of general anaesthesia
Professor Jamie Sleigh
When worlds (don’t) collide: lung gas
exchange modelling in anaesthesia
Associate Professor Philip Peyton
Transforming healthcare
Professor Dorothy Keefe
Team approaches to surgical
pathways
Professor Guy Ludbrook
Panel discussion: Professor
Dorothy Keefe, Professor
Guy Ludbrook, Management
SIG Executive and Dr Gerry
O’Callaghan
Substance misuse how bad is it? The
current state of play and how we
might improve the outcome
Dr Rob Fry and Mr Lewis Fry
MBA - keeping the waters safe
Dr Joanna Flynn
Unwell doctors - prevention is better
Dr Roger Sexton
W18A: Faculty development
W23A: The prescribing anaesthetist in the
perioperative period - what’s interfering and
what’s not?
SGD18: Anaesthesia for electroconvulsive
therapy - is there more to it than Propofol and
Sux?
SGD27: Asleep at the wheel
SGD38: Anaesthesia for the high risk vascular
patient
Morning tea, healthcare industry exhibition
HALL L/M
11-12.30pm
SA Visitor’s Lecture
Chair: Dr Genevieve Goulding, ANZCA President
Professor Robert Sneyd (ANZCA SA Visitor) - Old habits die hard: what should we change and when?
Organising Committee Visitor’s Lecture
Associate Professor Gregory Crosby (Organising Committee Visitor) – The aging face of anaesthesia and pain medicine
12.30-1.30pm
Lunch, healthcare industry exhibition
1.30-3pm
3-3.30pm
HALL L/M
C1/C2
HALL J
HALL K
REFER TO PAGE 30
REFER TO PAGE 33
Women in anaesthesia
Lies, damned lies and biostatistics
Medical Education SIG - is
workplace based assessment
working?
Infectious disease and microbiology
WORKSHOPS
SGDs
Chair: Dr Lynne Rainey
Chair: Professor Paul Myles
Chair: Dr Natalie Smith
Chair: TBA
Status report - women in anaesthesia in
Australia and New Zealand
Professor Kate Leslie
Leaders - the journey and the view from
‘the top’
Dr Vanessa Beavis
Returning to work - ‘CRASH’ and don’t burn
Dr Jeanette Wright and Dr Kara Allen
The importance of a structured and critical
‘critical appraisal’
Associate Professor David Harley
Publication bias and quality of evidence in
anaesthesia and perioperative medicine
Associate Professor Philip Peyton
Clusters, wedges and platforms: novel study
designs in perioperative medicine
Professor Tomás Corcoran
Workplace-based assessment in
ANZCA - what it’s intended to do
Dr Damian Castanelli
Mining the trainee portfolio
system - intended and
unintended consequences of
Mini-CEX assessments
Associate Professor Jennifer
Weller
Matching intentions with
outcomes: a more general view
on workplace-based assessment
Professor Lambert Schuwirth
Antimicrobial prophylaxis, resistance
and emerging threats
Professor Morgyn Warner
Infection control in theatre and the
impact of nosocomial diseases
Dr Rhonda Stuart
W20B: Home brew and open source web based
software- software development for education
and administration in a busy anaesthetic
department
SGD10: Iron shield: patient blood management
in action
SGD26: Ethical legal consent
SGD46: Beyond morphine in pediatric in pain
management
Afternoon tea, healthcare industry exhibition
HALL L/M
3.30-4.30pm
CLOSING SESSION
Chairs: Dr Nathan Davis and Dr Bill Wilson
Meet the experts
Join us for a not to be missed panel with our world class keynote speakers where they tackle the tough questions!
Panel discussion: Professor Rupert Pearse, Professor Irene Tracey, Professor Robert Sneyd,
Associate Professor Gregory Crosby, Professor Tomás Corcoran
Closing address
Dr Genevieve Goulding, ANZCA President
*subject to change without prior notice. For the most up-to-date details please visit the ASM App or Virtual ASM.
CPD program
This event is claimable by ANZCA CPD participants within
knowledge and skills and emergency responses; ANZCA members
will automatically have their attendance accredited to their CPD
portfolio following the ASM in June 2015.
Knowledge and skills activities
Lectures, breakfast and lunchtime sessions for one credit per hour
Workshops, small group discussions, PBLDs for two credits per hour
Emergency responses activities
ANZCA workshop education sessions that include, can’t
intubate, can’t oxygenate (CICO), cardiac arrest, anaphylaxis,
or major haemorrhage can be claimed but they must have
been prospectively recognised as suitable to be claimed as an
emergency response activity.
Further details about emergency responses education sessions
please refer to the ANZCA CPD Program Handbook.
CPD assistance on site at the ASM in Adelaide
ANZCA CPD staff will be available at the ANZCA lounge located in
the HCI exhibition to assist with any questions you have on CPD.
24
25
MODERATED ePOSTERS
ePOSTERS
Moderated ePosters sessions will allow authors to present information using high resolution images and up to date research.
TRAINEE EPOSTER PRIZE SESSION
Date: Saturday May 2 2015, 3.30-5pm
Room: Riverbank R5
MODERATED POSTER SESSION: OTHER
DATE: SUNDAY MAY 3 2015, 1.30-3pm
ROOM: RIVERBANK R5
Dr Erin Bourke
Cricothyroidotomy catheters; an investigation of
mechanisms of failure and the effect of a novel
intra-catheter stylet
Dr Christopher Perry
Facemask anaesthetics, leaky tubes and “lowflow” anaesthesia in paediatric practice - an
observational audit
Dr Matthew Spencer
A retrospective 4.5 year audit of outcomes using
a MTP from a tertiary referral trauma center
Dr Hamish Mace
Dr Yee Ching Yeow
Prevalence of pre-operative cognitive
impairment in the elderly
Medial open transversus abdominus plane
catheters as an adjunct to postoperative pain
management in patients undergoing liver
resection: a single centre retrospective study
Dr Martin Tyson
Dr Xiu Ling Jacqueline Sim
Dr Rebecca Kamp The Tunstall manoeuvre for Rapid Onset Spinal
Anaesthesia (ROSA) at Caesarean Section – a
randomised controlled trial
Current sedation practice for patients
undergoing endobronchial ultrasound
examination (EBUS): a prospective cohort study
Evaluation of epidural extension at a tertiary
referral hospital
OPEN EPOSTER PRIZE SESSION
Date: Sunday May 3 2015, 10.30AM-12.15pm
Room: Riverbank R5
Dr Rachel Dawson Effect of perineural versus intravenous
dexamethasone on ankle block duration
Dr Marie-Odile Parat
Quantification the mu-opioid and TLR4 receptor
activation potential in the circulation of mice
and humans to assess the influence of morphine
on tumour metastasis
Miss Azho Kezo
A randomized placebo controlled double
blinded comparison of effect of intravenous
dexmedetomidine on duration and intensity of
brachial plexus block
Dr Hugh Taylor
An audit of the effectiveness of the smoking
cessation interventions offered to elective
surgical patients at Western Health
Dr Bernadette Wilks
A balance between trust and autonomy: a
qualitative study of women’s operating theatre
suite stress while undergoing breast cancer
surgery
Two cases of perioperative anaphylaxis
following intravenous paracetamol: Looking
beyond the obvious
Dr Sze Ying Thong
A review of perioperative mortality in a
Singapore tertiary hospital
Dr Hannah Fritzlaff
Preoperative frailty and its correlation with
recovery from anaesthesia
Dr Agnieszka Szremska
Audit of intra- and post-operative analgesia
and compliance with the quality improvement
framework for major limb amputations at
Flinders Medical Centre
MODERATED POSTER SESSION: PERIOPERATIVE MEDICINE
Date: Sunday May 3 2015, 3.30-5pm
Room: Riverbank R5
Dr William Ng
Dr Michal Kluger
Dr Nicholas Lightfoot
Predictors of delirium after transapical and
transfemoral transcatheter aortic valve
implantations
Can preoperative factors differentiate those
patients who are more likely to develop
chronic postsurgical pain after total knee joint
arthroplasty?
Dr Grace Huang
Exercise prior to cancer surgery: Is
prehabilitation the best premedication?
Mr Francis Mooney
The impact of quality of recovery on
postoperative cognitive decline
Pre-operative fasting in patients undergoing
elective and emergency surgery: A clinical audit
at a tertiary teaching hospital
Substance use disorder amongst Australian and
New Zealand anaesthetists: an analysis of thirty
years of data
Dr Annabel Lim
Dr Sumitra Bakshi
A prospective, randomized trial to evaluate
role of McGrath MAC videolaryngoscope in
placement of double lumen tubes (DLT)
MODERATED POSTER SESSION: OBSTETRICS
Date: Monday May 4 2015, 10.30AM-noon
Room: Riverbank R5
Dr Georgina Prassas
Breast cancer treatment-related lymphoedema:
Stratified avoidance of venepuncture and blood
pressure measurement on the treated upper
limb following axillary surgery
Dr Nicholas Lightfoot
Conversion of obstetric epidural analgesia to
caesarean section anaesthesia – An audit of a
regional hospital’s practice and performance
Dr Ruoyi Sun
Gynaecology post-operative analgesia - Does
regional analgesia have a significant role?
Miss Marrwah
Ahmadzai
A survey of maternal satisfaction after
anaesthesia for caesarean section using the
validated quality of anaesthesia questionnaire
A prospective observational study of maternal
oxygenation during remifentanil patientcontrolled analgesia use in labour
Dr Sara Arcioni
M+M meetings: Do they fulfil their purpose?
Dr Philippa Flinn
Intravascular catheters, an ultrasound imaging
based observational study of position and
function
Dr Andrew Messmer
Dr Mitchell Petersen Tym
A System of perioperative care
Dr Nicolaas Terblanche
Dr Divyadarshni Vadivel
A prospective randomized comparative double
blinded study to evaluate the safety and efficacy
of bupivacaine and clonidine versus bupivacaine
only for supratentorial craniotomies
Dr Alexander Smirk
The enhanced recovery “greenie board”:
A naval-inspired quality improvement tool
to address sustainability of evidence-based
protocols
Dr Libia Machado
Munoz
CASE REPORT
Dr Harikrishnan Kothandan
Dr Ashvin Paramanathan
Non-inferiority trial of 3IU versus 5IU slow
bolus oxytocin in patients undergoing elective
caesarean delivery
A 2 year retrospective audit of remifentanil
patient controlled analgesia (PCA) use in labour
OTHER (continued)
Anaesthesia management and cerebral
protection strategies used for combined
open aortic arch repair and TEVAR: a case
report
Independent lung ventilation in the post
operative management of a large left
bronchopleural fistula in a patient with
bilateral bronchopleural fistula
Dr Masashi Uchida
The dose of thiopentone for the
suppression of cortical activity in
induction of anesthesis for women is
bigger than that for men
PAIN MEDICINE
Associate Professor
Lisbeth Evered
Chronic Pain 7y Post CABG is not affected
by opioid dose
Dr Roger Scott
Gender wars: an inflammatory situation
Dr Seema Radhakrishnan
A model to increase early help seeking
behavior In anaesthetists living with or
at-risk of anxiety, depression and other
mental health illness
Low intensity interdisciplinary chronic
pain self-management program:
experiences from a tertiary hospital
Dr Jo Sutherland Opioid deprescribing for postoperative
patients
The experience and outcomes of
SANTRATS (South Australia and Northern
Territory Rotational Anaesthesia Training
Scheme) registrars who time-out of basic
training due to failing the primary exam
Dr I Made Agus
Suarsana
A series of under hypnosis anaesthesia
surgical procedure
PERIOPERATIVE MEDICINE
Dr Selena Hunter A prospective observational study of
acute pain and analgesic requirements
after lower segment caesarean section
Are anaesthetic preassessment clinics
to blame - declining junior doctor skill
in physical examination as shown by a
retrospective analysis of the medical
admission note over four decades
Dr Hamed Elgendy
Evaluation of patients’ satisfaction with
anesthesia service: tertiary center
Dr Sarah Wallis
Nemaline myopathy: anaesthetic
management and considerations in a
patient with this rare congenital condition
HEALTH AND WELL BEING
Dr Ann-Maree Barnes
Rapid transfusion of blood mixture in
adult liver transplantation recipients
Audit of outcome on radiofrequency
denervation of the lumbar zygapophysial
joints
Major blood loss from apixiban and
cardiopulmonary bypass for ventricular
assist insertion
Dr David Noble
Dr Eun-Jin Chung Dr Vyhunthan Ganeshanathan
Dr William Ng
OBSTETRICS
Miss Luisa Rosi
Dr Wan Ling Leong
Incidence and risk factors for myocardial
damage following acute surgery for fractured
neck of femur
Mr Lewis Fry
MODERATED POSTER SESSION: SYSTEMS AND SAFETY
Date: Saturday May 2 2015, 1.30-3pm
Room: Riverbank R5
26
Dr Sarah Green
ePosters will be displayed for the duration of the ASM in foyer R5 on the lower level, foyer L near the registration desk and within the HCI area.
A case series of vital signs-controlled,
patient-assisted intravenous analgesia
(VPIA) using remifentanil for labour and
delivery
Dr Phuong Pham
Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis post
dural puncture and epidural blood patch
in a parturient: a case report and review
of the literature
Dr Brigid Brown
Epidural conversion to general
anaesthesia for caesarean section in a
South Australian Hospital: A prospective
study
Dr John Scarlett
A retrospective audit of caesarean
sections under regional anaesthesia
requiring conversion to general
anaesthesia post delivery: 15 years of
experience at Christchurch Women’s
Hospital
OTHER
Dr Nargiza Persheeva
The impact of cell salvage on patient
outcome in primary hip arthroplasty
Dr Katherine Cynthia
Under the drape support- The effect of
oxygen flow rate
Dr Hamed Elgendy
Variation of anesthetic sedation
requirements in children undergoing
auditory brainstem response (ABR) test
experience
Dr Ravi Raveendran
X ray assisted LMA exchange extubation
technique, for a difficult airway in
neuroradiology suite – a case report
Dr Praveen Babu
Mamillapalli
Association of a single bolus dose of
intraoperative tranexamic acid with
perioperative blood transfusion and
hospital length of stay in patients
undergoing revision hip arthroplasty
REGIONAL ANAESTHESIA
Dr Riya Jose
Dexamethasone as adjuvant to local
anaesthetics in scalp nerve blocks
Professor Yew-Weng
Chan Plain 0.5% Bupivacaine : a predictable
spinal anaesthetic agent for total knee
replacement (TKR) surgery
SAFETY AND SYSTEMS
Professor Jan Davies
Another factor in anaesthetic medication
safety
Dr Christopher Perry
Pre-anaesthetic communication with
children and parents - an observational
study
Dr Adeline Fong
An evaluation study of referrals made to
the pain fellow at the pain management
department of a tertiary teaching hospital
Dr Shi Hong Shen Compliance in administration of the
surgical safety checklist at the Royal
Melbourne Hospital
Dr Janette Wright Anaesthetist specific return to work
course inception and development:
The CRASH Course (Critical Care,
Resuscitation, Anaesthetic Skills in High
fidelity simulation
Dr Kara Allen
CRASH or burn? Returning to work after
extended leave
Ms Janelle Penno
The impact of a pharmacist within a
surgical oncology pre-anaesthetic clinic
Dr Brett Sampson
Donation after cardiac death
27
ADVERTISEMENT
PRIZES
Gilbert Brown Prize
The Gilbert Brown Prize is a prestigious prize that is
awarded annually at the ASM. Eligibility for the Prize
shall be limited to Fellows of the College and the Faculty
of Pain Medicine within eight (8) years of admission to
Fellowship of ANZCA. In the case of Fellows who also
a hold a specialist qualification from another college
or equivalent, eligibility for the prize shall be limited
to Fellows within eight years of obtaining their original
specialist qualification in anaesthesia or pain medicine. The
prize takes the form of a medal and will be accompanied
by a grant of $1,000 AUD for educational purposes. The
Gilbert Brown Prize winner will also receive a certificate
recognising the award.
ANZCA Trainee Academic Prize
The ANZCA Trainee Academic Prize shall be awarded to
the Trainee or Fellow, within one (1) year of admission to
Fellowship who is judged to make the best contribution at
the Trainee Academic session held as part of the Annual
Scientific Meeting (ASM). This session will only be open
to Trainees or Fellows to present material related to a
scholar role activity (under the 2013 curriculum) or a
formal project (under the 2004 curriculum) as defined in
ANZCA Professional Document TE11. The prize will take
the form of a medal, and be accompanied by a certificate
recognising the achievement.
FPM Dean’s Prize
The FPM Dean’s Prize is awarded for original work
presented in the area of pain, judged to be a significant
contribution to Pain Medicine and/or Pain Research.
Eligibility is limited to trainees of the Faculty of Pain
Medicine, trainees of the five participating professional
bodies of the FPM, or Fellows of FPM within eight (8) years
of admission to fellowship of the FPM, except that elected
fellows must be within eight (8) years of admission to their
original fellowship at the date of the meeting. The prize
takes the form of a certificate and a grant of $1,000AUD
for educational or research purposes. The prize will be
awarded at the FPM Annual General Meeting held during
the ASM.
FPM Best Free Paper Award
The Best Free Paper Award is awarded for original work
judged to be the best contribution to the Free Papers
session of the Faculty of Pain Medicine. The Faculty Free
Paper session is open to all ASM registrants. The prize
takes the form of a certificate and a grant of $500AUD
for educational or research purposes. The prize will be
awarded at the FPM Annual General Meeting held during
the ASM.
Poster Prizes
Poster prizes will be announced and awarded at the gala
dinner on the Monday evening of the ASM. The Regional
Organising Committee of the 2015 ASM will select
two posters to be awarded a prize under the following
categories.
ASM 2015 Open ePoster Prize
This prize of $500 AUD is to be used for a recognised
educational purpose and will be awarded to the author(s)
of a poster, which the Regional Organising Committee
considers best of those submitted in terms of originality,
scientific rigor and quality of presentation.
ASM 2015 Trainee ePoster Prize
This prize of $500 AUD is to be used for a recognised
educational purpose and will be awarded to the author(s)
of a poster presented by a trainee of any anaesthetic
college, which the Regional Organising Committee
considers best of those submitted in terms of originality,
scientific rigor and quality of presentation.
Note: If requested, the trainee must produce a letter or a
form of proof from their anaesthetic college confirming
their enrolment.
DAYS
CONTINUOUS PAIN RELIEF1
7-DAYS CONTINUOUS PAIN RELIEF1
PBS Information: Restricted benefit. Chronic severe disabling pain not responding to
non-narcotic analgesics. Authority required for increased maximum quantities and/or repeats.
Refer to PBS schedule for full Authority Required Information.
Please review Product Information and State and Federal regulations before prescribing. The Product
Information for NORSPAN® patches can be accessed at www.mundipharma.com.au/Products.aspx
Following a comprehensive biopsychosocial assessment, opioid analgesics such as NORSPAN® patches should not be prescribed in isolation, but only as part of
a multimodal pain management approach after all conservative non-pharmacological and pharmacological treatment options have been tried and are inadequate.2
NORSPAN® TRANSDERMAL DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEM MINIMUM PRODUCT INFORMATION. NAME OF THE MEDICINE Buprenorphine. INDICATIONS Management of moderate to severe pain. CONTRAINDICATIONS Hypersensitivity
to buprenorphine or patch components, myasthenia gravis, delirium tremens, pregnancy, severely impaired respiratory function, concurrent non-selective MAO inhibitors (or within 14 days of their administration), treatment of opioid dependence
or withdrawal. PRECAUTIONS Use with caution in convulsive disorders, head injury, shock, reduced level of consciousness of uncertain origin, intracranial lesions or increased intracranial pressure, severe hepatic impairment, history of seizure
disorder*, hypotension, hypovolaemia, biliary tract disease, pancreatitis, inflammatory bowel disorders, prostatic hypertrophy, adrenocortical insufficiency, chronic renal and hepatic disease, following abdominal surgery, in debilitated patients,
known or suspected drug or alcohol abuse problems, serious mental illness, intravenous administration of buprenorphine, congenital or medication-induced QT prolongation, driving or operating machinery, pregnancy (Category C), lactation.
Do not use in immediate post-operative period, within 24 hours of cordotomy or other pain-relieving surgery. Reduce dosage in hypothyroidism and monitor severely febrile patients for enhanced drug absorption. Physical dependence and
withdrawal syndrome may develop. Do not use in opioid-dependent patients. Increased alanine aminotransferase levels have been noted. INTERACTIONS Contraindicated in patients concurrently receiving non-selective MAO inhibitors or within
14 days of stopping treatment. Caution is advised with the newer selective MAO inhibitors. CNS depressants (sedatives, hypnotics, general anaesthetics, opioids, phenothiazines, centrally acting anti-emetics, benzodiazepines, alcohol) can
cause respiratory depression, hypotension and profound sedation or coma. Some general anaesthetics (halothane) and other drugs can decrease hepatic elimination of buprenorphine. CYP3A4 inhibitors (protease inhibitors, azole antimycotics,
calcium channel antagonists, macrolide antibiotics) might increase buprenorphine levels. Enzyme inducers (phenobarbitone, carbamazepine, phenytoin, rifampicin) could lead to increased clearance and reduced efficacy. Buprenorphine has
also been shown to be a CYP2D6 inhibitor in vitro. INR levels may potentially increase with concurrent warfarin. ADVERSE EFFECTS Adverse reactions are similar to those observed with other opioid analgesics and tend to reduce over time
except for constipation. Very common (≥ 10%) adverse reactions include application site reaction (includes erythema, oedema, pruritus or rash at application site), constipation, dizziness, dry mouth, headache, nausea, pruritus, somnolence
and vomiting. Common (≥ 1% to < 10%) adverse reactions include abdominal pain, anorexia, anxiety, asthenic conditions (including muscle weakness, lethargy, fatigue and malaise), chest pain, confusion, depression, diarrhoea, dysgeusia
(taste disturbance), dyspepsia, dyspnoea, exanthema, insomnia, nervousness, pain, paraesthesia, peripheral oedema, rash, sweating, tiredness, tremor*, vasodilatation. DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION Adults: For transdermal use only
over 7 days. The initial dose is 5 µg/hr, especially in opioid-naïve patients and during conversion from other opioids (up to 90 mg oral morphine-equivalents/day and combination analgesics). Titrate until adequate analgesia and improvement in
function is achieved, continuing supplemental analgesics as required. Do not increase dose at less than 3-day intervals. To increase dose, remove current patch and apply a higher strength patch or a combination of patches at a different site
(the current site should not be used for 3-4 weeks). No more than two patches should be applied at the same time. Apply to intact, non-irritated, relatively hairless skin of upper outer arm, upper back, or upper or side of the chest, avoiding
large scars. Use only water to clean skin, and dry before applying patch. Apply patch immediately after removal from pouch. Press firmly in place for 30 seconds. Bathing, showering or swimming should not affect the patch, however if edges
start peeling off, tape down with skin tape. If patch falls off, apply a new one. Avoid exposing the application site to external heat sources as an increase in absorption may occur. On removal, fold used patch bringing adhesive sides together, and
dispose of safely, out of reach of children. Serum concentrations will decrease gradually, and subsequent opioids should not be administered within 24 hours. Monitor patients to assess the optimum dose and treatment duration. If adequate pain
relief cannot be achieved at maximum patch doses, convert to around-the-clock strong opioid. No dosage adjustment is required in renal impairment, in mild to moderate hepatic impairment or in the elderly, but use with caution if at all in severe
hepatic impairment as accumulation of buprenorphine may occur. Not recommended in patients under 18 years of age. DATE OF FIRST INCLUSION
IN THE AUSTRALIAN REGISTER OF THERAPEUTIC GOODS (THE ARTG) 9 May 2005. DATE OF MOST RECENT AMENDMENT 18 March 2013.
REFERENCES: 1. NORSPAN® patch Product Information, Mar 2013. 2. Analgesic Expert Group. Therapeutic Guidelines: Analgesic. Version 6. Melbourne: Therapeutic Guidelines Limited, 2012.
®: NORSPAN is a Registered Trademark. Mundipharma Pty Limited ABN 87 081 322 509, 50 Bridge Street, Sydney, NSW 2000. Tel: 1800 188 009. Saatchi & Saatchi Health MNO0085/FPC ORBIS AU-2073 Jan 14.
*Please note changes in Product Information
28
WORKSHOPS
A ticket is required for entry to all workshops. This ticket
is included in your registration pack. If you have registered
and paid for a workshop and have not received a ticket,
please approach the registration desk.
If you are no longer able to attend your chosen workshop,
please return your ticket to the registration desk so that
another delegate may attend in your place. Unfortunately
no refunds can be offered.
If you would like to attend a workshop, please check with
the registration desk on a daily basis. Any additional places
will be allocated on a first-come-first-serve basis.
TECHNICAL SKILLS STREAM: EMERGENCY RESPONSE CPD
EMERGENCY ANAESTHESIA / ALS
Facilitators: Date/Time:
Dr James Hafner, Dr Robert Young,
Dr Mervyn Atkinson, Dr Kuan Lee Ng,
Dr Giresh Chandran, Dr Alex Zanker,
Dr Zoe Lagana, Dr Graham Lowry,
Dr Simon Jenkins, Dr Michael Goldblatt,
Dr Nikki Dyson, Dr Faith Crichton,
Dr Rod Mitchell, Dr Andrew Puddy,
Dr Kirsten McCulloch, Dr Agnieska Sczremska, Dr Julianne Evans
Saturday May 2, 2015
W01A 10.30am-noon
W01B 1.30-3pm
W01C 3.30-5pm
Sunday May 3, 2015
W01D 10.30am-noon
W01E 1.30-3pm
W01F 3.30-5pm
Monday May 4, 2015
W01G 10.30am-noon
W01H 1.30-3pm
W01I 3.30-5pm
Room:
Hall N
CRICOTHYROTOMY
Facilitators: Date/Time:
Dr Chris Acott, Dr Yasmin Endlich
Dr Zoe Lagana, Dr Donna Willmot, Dr Adam Badenoch, Dr Irina Hollington, Dr Pat Belperio, Dr Tish Stefanutto, Dr Richard Semenov, Dr Frank Parker, Dr Josh Hayes,
Dr Richard Church, Dr Nichola Crowley,
Prof Fritz Puhringer, Dr Richard Walsh ,
Dr Pauline Wake, Dr Elizabeth Inaido- Lee
Sunday May 3, 2015
W02A 3.30-5pm
Monday May 4, 2015
W02B 10.30am-noon
W02C 1.30-3pm
W02D 3.30-5pm
Room:
Riverbank R2
ANAPHYLAXIS CRISIS MANAGEMENT
Facilitators: Date/Time:
Dr Nagesh Nanjappa, Dr Heather Stevens,
Dr Paul McAleer and Dr Alison Brereton,
Ms Ann McPhedran, Ms Louise Merrigan,
Ms Di Edwards and Dr Agnieszka Szremska
Monday May 4, 2015
W03A 1.30-3pm
W03B 3.30-5pm
Sunday May 3, 2015
W03C 10.30am-noon
Room:
Riverbank R7 and Riverbank R8
STREAM: EMERGENCY RESPONSE OTHER
TRAUMA: LESSONS FROM THE POINTY END
Facilitator: Date/Time:
Dr Bruce Paix Monday May 4, 2015
W04A 1.30-3pm
W04B 3.30-5pm
Room:
Riverbank R6
PAEDIATRIC AIRWAY MANAGEMENT
Facilitators: Date/Time:
Dr Rob Laing, Dr David Costi, Dr Cormac Fahy, Dr Nich Marks, Dr Yasmin Endlich, Nicola Crowley, Dr Fiona Tavener and Dr Chris Perry
Saturday May 2, 2015
W05A 10.30am-noon
W05B 1.30-3pm
Room:
Riverbank R6
NEONATAL RESUSCITATION WORKSHOP FOR THE RURAL ANAESTHETIST
Facilitator: Dr Simon James
Date/Time:
Saturday May 2, 2015
W06A 3.30-5pm
Room:
Riverbank R4
STREAM: AIRWAY MANAGEMENT
FIBREOPTIC
Facilitators: Date/Time:
Dr Chris Acott, Dr Yasmin Endlich
Dr Zoe Lagana, Dr Donna Willmot, Dr Adam Baddenoch, Dr Irina Hollington, Dr Pat Belperio, Dr Tish Stefanutto, Dr Richard Semenov,
Dr Frank Parker, Dr Josh Hayes, Dr Richard Church, Dr Nichola Crowley, Prof Fritz Puhringer, Dr Richard Walsh , Dr Pauline Wake,
Dr Elizabeth Inaido- Lee
Saturday May 2, 2015
W07A 1.30-3pm
W07B 3.30-5pm
Room:
Riverbank R2
TRACHEOSTOMY
Facilitators: Date/Time:
Dr Chris Acott and Dr Yasmin Endlich
Dr Zoe Lagana, Dr Donna Willmot, Dr Adam Baddenoch, Dr Irina Hollington, Dr Pat Belperio, Dr Tish Stefanutto, Dr Richard Semenov,
Dr Frank Parker, Dr Josh Hayes, Dr Richard Church, Dr Nichola Crowley, Prof Fritz Puhringer, Dr Richard Walsh , Dr Pauline Wake,
Dr Elizabeth Inaido- Lee
SSunday May 3, 2015
W08A 10.30am-noon
W08B 1.30-3pm
Room:
Riverbank R2
BASIC TRANSTHORACIC ECHO
Facilitators: Dr John Leyden, Dr William Cheng,
Dr Devan Mahadavan, Mr Matthew Chapman, Dr Sarika Kumar Date/Time:
Saturday May 2, 2015
W09A 10.30am-3pm
Room:
Riverbank R3
ADVANCED TRANSTHORACIC ECHO
Facilitators: Dr John Leyden, Dr William Cheng,
Dr Devan Mahadavan, Mr Matthew Chapman, Dr Sarika Kumar Date/Time:
Sunday May 3, 2015
W10A 10.30am-3pm
Room:
Riverbank R3
PRE-HOSPITAL ULTRASOUND (ACCUTE SIG)
Facilitators: Associate Professor Andrew Pearce and
Dr Jamin Mulvey
Date/Time:
Monday May 4, 2015
W11A 3.30-5pm
Room:
City Room C4
STREAM: REGIONAL ANAESTHESIA
UPPER LIMB
Facilitator: Date/Time:
Room:
Dr Justin Porter Sunday May 3, 2015
W12A 1.30-3pm
W12B 3.30-5pm
Hall L3
LOWER LIMB
Facilitator: Date/Time:
Facilitator: Date/Time:
Dr Paul Richards Sunday May 3, 2015
W14A 1.30-3pm
W14B 3.30-5pm
Room:
Hall L2
NEUROAXIAL AND PARAVERTEBRAL
Facilitators: Date/Time:
Room:
STREAM: IMAGING
Room:
30
ABDOMINAL WALL
Dr Kaushik Saha and Dr Faith Crichton
Sunday May 3, 2015
W15A 1.30-3pm
W15B 3.30-5pm
Riverbank R4
OPHTHALMIC BLOCKS
Facilitators: Date/Time:
Room:
Dr Jon Clarke, Dr Andrew Lavender and
Dr Stewart Lake
Sunday May 3, 2015
W16A 1.30-3pm
W16B 3.30-5pm
City Room C3
STREAM: VASCULAR ACCESS
SUPRACLAVICULAR SUBCLAVIAN VEIN CANNULATION USING ULTRASOUND
(ACCUTE SIG)
Facilitator: Date/Time:
Room:
Dr Jamin Mulvey
Monday May 4, 2015
W17A 10.30am-noon
City Room C4
NON-TECHNICAL SKILLS
STREAM: EDUCATION AND TRAINING
FACULTY DEVELOPMENT
Facilitator: Date/Time:
Room:
Dr Natalie Smith and Dr Damien Castanelli
Tuesday May 5, 2015
W18A 9-10.30am
Hall L3
PRACTICAL HYPNOSIS FOR THE BUSY ANAESTHETIST
Facilitators: Dr Allan Cyna , Dr Suyin Tan and
Dr Michael Goldblatt
Date/Time:
Saturday May 2, 2015
W19A 1.30-5pm
Room:
Riverbank R7
Dr David McLeod Sunday May 3, 2015
W13A 1.30-3pm
W13B 3.30-5pm
Riverbank R6
31
WORKSHOPS (CONTINUED)
EDUCATION
HOME BREW AND OPEN SOURCE WEB BASED SOFTWARE – SOFTWARE
DEVELOPMENT FOR EDUCATION AND ADMINISTRATION IN A BUSY
ANAESTHETIC DEPARTMENT
SUPERVISOR OF TRAINING (SOT)- THE CHANGING FACE OF THE SOT
Facilitator: Date/Time:
Room:
Dr Mark Markou
Monday May 4, 2014
W20A 1.30-3pm
Tuesday May 5, 2015
W20B 1.30-3pm
Hall L3
OVERSEAS WORK AND DEVELOPMENT
Facilitators: Date/Time:
Room:
Dr Evelyn Cheng, Dr Chris Bowden, Dr Phil Blum and Dr Wayne Moriss
Saturday May 2, 2015
W21A 10.30am-noon
W21B 3.30-5pm
Riverbank R8
PROCESS COMMUNICATION MODEL: K“ EY2ME”
Facilitator: Date/Time:
Room:
Dr Marion Andrew Saturday May 2, 2015
W22A 1.30-6pm
Sunday May 3, 2015
W22B 1-5.30pm
City Room C4
STREAM: PERIOPERATIVE MEDICINE
THE PRESCRIBING ANAESTHETIST IN THE PERIOPERATIVE PERIOD
- WHATS’ INTERFERING AND WHAT’S NOT?
Facilitators: Date/Time:
Dr Dick Ongley, Dr Joel Symons,
Dr Arvinder Grover and Dr Graham Morton
Tuesday May 5, 2015
W23A 9-10.30am
Monday May 4, 2015
W23B 3.30-5pm
Room:
Hall L2
Facilitator: Mr Maurice Hennessy
Date/Time:
Sunday May 3, 2015
W24A 10.30am-noon
Monday May 4, 2015
W24B 10.30am-noon
Room:
W24A City Room C4
W24B Riverbank R6
Pre-meeting session
SMALL GROUP DISCUSSIONS
A ticket is required for entry to all small group discussions
(SGD). This ticket is included in your registration pack.
If you have registered and paid for a SGD and have not
received a ticket, please approach the registration desk.
If you are no longer able to attend your chosen SGD,
please return your ticket to the registration desk so that
another delegate may attend in your place. Unfortunately
no refunds can be offered.
If you would like to attend a SGD, please check with the
registration desk on a daily basis. Any additional places
will be allocated on a first-come-first-serve basis.
SGD STREAM: Cardiac/thoracic
Twitter 101: Spreading your wings
Facilitator:
Dr Jo Sutherland
Date/time:
Saturday May 2, 2015
PMS01 7.30-8am
Room:
Hall K
Cath lab crisis
Facilitator:
Dr Kelly Bratkovic
Date/time:
Saturday May 2, 2015
SGD01 12.15-1.15pm
Room:
City Suite CS1
TAVI IN NON-HYBRID THEATRE
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr William Cheng
Saturday May 2, 2015
SGD02 3.30-4.30pm
City Suite CS1
THORACOTOMY- ANALGESIC OPTIONS AND DILEMMAS
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Helen Vlachtsis
Monday May 4, 2015
SGD03 12.15-1.15pm
City Suite CS1
ANAESTHESIA FOR THE ADVENTUROUS BRONCHOSCOPIST
Facilitator:
Dr Kate Drummond
Date/time:
Sunday May 3, 2015
SGD04 10.30-11.30am
Room:
City Suite CS1
SGD STREAM: PERIOPERATIVE MEDICINE
THERE ARE BARIATRIC PATIENTS, AND THEN THERE ARE BARIATRIC
PATIENTS- DECISION MAKING AT THE END OF THE LINE
Facilitator:
Dr Simon Macklin
Date/time:
Monday May 4, 2015
SGD05 12.15-1.15pm
Room:
City Suite CS2
THE PATIENT WITH PULMONARY HYPERTENSION FOR NON-CARDIAC
SURGERY
IS TRANSTHORACIC ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY FOR YOU?
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Tony Pearce
Monday May 4, 2015
SGD07 1.30-2.30pm
City Suite CS1
DECISION MAKING IN PERIOPERATIVE RESUSCITATION
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Cameron Main
Monday May 4, 2015
SGD08 1.30-2.30pm
City Suite CS2
NON-PHARMACOLOGICAL ANXIOLYSIS -VEGAS STYLE
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Michael Goldblatt
Sunday May 3, 2015
SGD09 3.30-5pm
City Suite CS1
IRON SHIELD: PATIENT BLOOD MANAGEMENT IN ACTION
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Bernd Froessler
Tuesday May 5, 2015
SGD10 1.30-2.30pm
City Suite CS1
GETTING TO THE HEART OF PERIOPERATIVE MYOCARDIAL INJURY IN NON
CARDIAC SURGERY
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Oliver David
Monday May 4, 2015
SGD11 3.30-4.30pm
City Suite CS1
WHERE NEUROLOGIST AND ANAESTHETIST MAY CLASH: ANAESTHESIA FOR
ACUTE STROKE
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Shona Osborn
Sunday May 3, 2015
SGD12 3.30-4.30pm
City Suite CS2
EYE LISTS MADE EASIER
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Jon Clarke
Saturday May 2, 2015
SGD13 10.30-11.30am
City Suite CS2
UTILISING LUMBAR DRAINS FOR SPINAL CORD PROTECTION DURING TEVAR
(THORACIC ENDOVASCULAR AORTIC REPAIR) OR MAJOR AORTIC SURGERY
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Dave Cardone
Sunday May 3, 2015
SGD14 12.15-1.15pm
City Suite CS1
Facilitator:
Dr Sam Tong
Date/time:
Saturday May 2, 2015
SGD06 10.30-11.30am
Room:
City Suite CS1
32
33
Small group discussions (CONTINUED)
ANAESTHESIA FOR CANCER SURGERY
Facilitator:
Dr Jason Chou
Date/time:
Sunday May 3, 2015
SGD15 12.15-1.15pm
Room:
City Suite CS2
PERIOPERATIVE THROMBOPROPHYLAXIS: EXPANDING THE ROLE OF
ANAESTHETISTS IN RISK REDUCTION AND QUALITY IMPROVEMENT
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Rani Chahal
Sunday May 3, 2015
SGD16 1.30-3.30pm
City Suite CS1
TO CEMENT OR NOT TO CEMENT…...
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Jo Melick
Sunday May 3, 2015
SGD17 12.15-1.15pm
City Suite CS3
ANAESTHESIA FOR ELECTROCONVULSIVE THERAPY - IS THERE MORE TO IT
THAN PROPOFOL AND SUX?
Facilitator:
Dr Ivan Ward
Date/time:
Tuesday May 5, 2015
SGD18 9-10am
Room:
City Suite CS1
YOU THINK THAT IS A COMPLEX CASE...CHECK THIS OUT!
Facilitator:
Dr Jeremy Fernando
Date/time:
Sunday May 3, 2015
SGD19 12.15-1.15pm
Room:
City Suite CS4
PRACTICAL ASPECTS OF IV IRON PRESCRIBING, DOSING AND
ADMINISTRATION FOR THE ANAESTHETIST
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Kathryn Robinson
Sunday May 3, 2015
SGD20 1.30-2.30pm
City Suite CS2
SGD STREAM: RESEARCH
GETTING STARTED IN RESEARCH
Facilitators:
Professor Kate Leslie and Ms Karen Goulding
Date/time:
Saturday May 2, 2015
SGD23 1.30-3pm
Room:
City Suite CS2
GETTING YOUR RESEARCH PUBLISHED
Facilitators:
Associate Professor Andrew Davidson
and Professor David Story
Date/time:
Sunday May 3, 2015
SGD24 1.30-3.30pm
Room:
City Suite CS3
NAVIGATING THE ETHICS COMMITTEE
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
ETHICAL LEGAL CONSENT
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
BEAM ME UP SCOTTY! TRANSPORTING THE MORBIDLY OBESE
Facilitator:
Dr Kylie Stanton
Date/time:
Saturday May 2, 2015
SGD21 1.30-3pm
Room:
City Suite CS1
ANAESTHETISTS AND AIRCRAFT: PREPARING FOR THE FALL
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
34
Dr Alex Zanker
Saturday May 2, 2015
SGD22 12.15-1.15pm
City Suite CS2
Associate Professor Bernadette Richards
Tuesday May 5, 2015
SGD26 1.30-3pm
City Suite CS2
SGD STREAM: EDUCATION AND WELFARE
ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL
Facilitators:
Dr Simon Jenkins and Dr Matthew Thomas
Date/time:
Tuesday May 5, 2015
SGD27 9-10am
Room:
City Suite CS2
MONSTERS IN THE MIND
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
SGD STREAM: UNUSUAL ENVIRONMENTS
Dr Tim Porter
Saturday May 2, 2015
SGD25 3.30-4.30pm
City Suite CS2
Dr Michael Goldblatt
Monday May 4, 2015
SGD28 3.30-5pm
City Suite CS2
MOVING FROM CLINICAL PRACTICE TO ACADEMIC TEACHING
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Robin Limb
Sunday May 3, 2015
SGD29 10.30-11.30am
City Suite CS2
PERFORMANCE ISSUES
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Di Khursandi
Saturday May 2, 2015
SGD30 1.30-2.30pm
City Suite CS3
BUILDING A HAPPY DEPARTMENT
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Di Khursandi
Monday May 4, 2015
SGD31 1.30-2.30pm
City Suite CS3
HOW GREEN IS MY ANAESTHETIC?
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Kristen Llewelyn
Monday May 4, 2015
SGD32 1.30-2.30pm
City Suite CS4
Facilitator:
Dr David Sainsbury
Date/time:
Monday May 4, 2015
SGD33 10.30-11.30am
Room:
City Suite CS1
UNDERSTANDING THE EMOTIONAL PATIENT
Room:
Dr David Sainsbury
Saturday May 2, 2015
SGD34 3.30-4.30pm
City Suite CS3
SGD STREAM: ANAESTHETIC REGISTRARS
DIFFICULT AIRWAYS: A PFY EXPERIENCE
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Adam Badenoch
Monday May 4, 2015
SGD35 10.30-11.30am
City Suite CS2
TEACHING ANAESTHETIC SKILLS... THE BLIND LEADING THE BLIND
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Faith Crichton
Monday May 4, 2015
SGD36 3.30-4.30pm
City Suite CS3
THE UNCOOPERATIVE PAEDIATRIC PATIENT VERSUS THE TRAINEE
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Room:
Dr Rachelle Augustes
Monday May 4, 2015
SGD37 12.15-1.15pm
City Suite CS3
Dr Sam Lumb
Monday May 4, 2015
SGD39 10.30-11.30am
City Suite CS3
APPROACHES AND CONSIDERATIONS FOR THE ACUTE AND CHRONIC LIVER
FAILURE PATIENT AND LIVER RESECTION
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
THE EXPERT TRAP
Facilitator:
Date/time:
OBSTETRICS AND OBESITY FOR BEGINNERS
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Dr Rick Champion
Sunday May 3, 2015
SGD40 10.30-11.30am
City Suite CS3
THE TROUBLESHOOTING EPIDURAL
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Irina Hollington
Monday May 4, 2015
SGD41 3.30-4.30pm
City Suite CS4
MANAGEMENT OF THE OPIOID ADDICTED PATIENT IN ACUTE PAIN
FOR BEGINNERS
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Irina Hollington
Saturday May 2, 2015
SGD42 1.30-2.30pm
City Suite CS4
SGD STREAM: PAEDIATRICS
PAEDIATRIC DILEMMAS
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr Dave Barker
Saturday May 2, 2015
SGD43 12.15-1.15pm
City Suite CS3
BEADS, PEANUTS, COINS AND BATTERIES- THE CHALLENGES OF INHALED OR
SWALLOWED FOREIGN BODIES IN PAEDIATRIC ANAESTHESIA
Facilitator:
Dr Yasmin Endlich
Date/time:
Saturday May 2, 2015
SGD44 3.30-4.30pm
Room:
City Suite CS4
ANAESTHESIA FOR THE HIGH RISK VASCULAR PATIENT - MORE THAN JUST
VASOPRESSOR AND AN ARTERIAL LINE?
Facilitator:
Date/time:
Room:
Dr James London
Tuesday May 5, 2015
SGD38 9-10am
City Suite CS3
35
Small group discussions (CONTINUED)
SGD STREAM: PAIN MEDICINE
TIPS AND TRICKS: THE OPIOID – TOLERANT PATIENT WITH ACUTE PAIN
Facilitator:
Dr Lindy Roberts
Date/time:
Monday May 4, 2015
SGD45 10.30-11.30am
Room:
City Suite CS4
BEYOND MORPHINE IN PAEDIATRIC PAIN MANAGEMENT
Facilitator:
Dr Emily Yeoh
Date/time:
Tuesday May 5, 2015
SGD46 1.30-2.30pm
Room:
City Suite CS3
ACUTE NEUROPATHIC PAIN
Facilitator:
Associate Professor David A Scott
Date/time:
Sunday May 3, 2015
SGD47 1.30-2.30pm
Room:
City Suite CS4
NEW OPIOIDS AND THE ANAESTHETIST
Facilitator:
Dr Tim Semple
Date/time:
Sunday May 3, 2015
SGD48 10.30-11.30am
Room:
City Suite CS4
SGD STREAM: OBSTETRIC ANAESTHESIA
FUN WITH PREGNANT FONTANS
Facilitator:
Dr Jason Koerber
Date/time:
Saturday May 2, 2015
SGD49 10.30-11.30am
Room:
City Suite CS3
THE ABC OF PREGNANCY: ADIPOSITY, BREATHLESSNESS AND
COAGULOPATHY
Facilitators:
Dr Susmita Bhattacharya and Dr Helena Choi
Date/time:
Sunday May 3, 2015
SGD50 3.30-4.30pm
Room:
City Suite CS3
SGD STREAM: REGIONAL ANAESTHESIA
FINESSING YOUR SPINAL ANAESTHESIA
Facilitator:
Dr Dave McLeod
Date/time:
Monday May 4, 2015
SGD51 12.15-1.15pm
Room:
City Suite CS4
36
37
BREAKFAST SESSIONS
LUNCHTIME SESSIONS
Breakfast will be served from 7am. Sessions will
commence at 7.15am and conclude at 8.15am.
Lunch will be served from noon. Sessions will
commence at 12.15pm and conclude at 1.15pm.
All sessions will be held within the Adelaide
Convention Centre.
Sessions will be held within the Adelaide
Convention Centre.
Sunday May 3, 2015
BS01
Management of neuropathic pain in the elderly
LS01
ROOM: P1/P2/P3
ROOM: Hall J
Kindly sponsored by
Kindly sponsored by
BS02 LS02
ROOM: Hall J
1
Advanced ventilation workshop
SPEAKER: Dr Chris Thompson, Senior Staff Specialist
Anaesthetist, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, New South Wales
Managing mixed pain - could less be more?
Lyrica helps control
my neuropathic pain
Sunday May 3, 2015
SPEAKER: Dr James Bradley, Anaesthetist and Pain Medicine
Physician, Wesley Anaesthesia and Pain Management, Brisbane
SPEAKER: Professor Stephan Schug, Pharmacology,
Pharmacy and Anaesthesiology Unit, School of Medicine
and Pharmacology, The University of Western Australia.
Anaesthesia and Pain Medicine, Royal Perth Hospital
ADVERTISEMENT
Managing challenges in NOAC treatment
SPEAKER: Dr Ali Bazargan, St Vincents Hospital, Victoria
ROOM: P1/P2/P3
Kindly sponsored by
Kindly sponsored by
MONDAY May 4, 2015
BS03 The use of buprenorphine patches in perioperative setting: A novel approach
SPEAKERS: Dr Brad Lawther, Consultant Anaesthetist - MBBCh
BSc Hons DA FCARCSI MRCA FANZCA
Dr Max Majedi, Consultant Anaesthetist - MBBS FANZCA
FFPMANZCA
ROOM: Hall J
Kindly sponsored by
MONDAY May 4, 2015
LS03
The role of tranexamic acid in patient blood management undergoing hip and
knee arthroplasty
SPEAKER: Dr Arpudaswamy Kumar, Staff Specialist,
The Queen Elizabeth Hospital, South Australia
ROOM: P1/P2/P3
Kindly sponsored by
PBS Information: Authority Required (Streamlined).
Treatment of refractory neuropathic pain not controlled by other drugs.
Before prescribing, please review full Product Information available from www.pfizer.com.au
BS04 The case for continuous monitoring of patients on PCA pumps
ROOM: P1/P2/P3
Kindly sponsored by
Minimum Product Information LYRICA® (pregabalin) Capsules. Indications: Neuropathic pain in adults; adjunctive therapy in adults with partial seizures with or without secondary generalisation.
Contraindications: Hypersensitivity to pregabalin or excipients. Precautions: Pregnancy; lactation; dizziness; somnolence; history of substance abuse; congestive heart failure; galactose intolerance;
withdrawal symptoms; renal impairment; peripheral oedema; creatine kinase elevation; weight gain; blurred vision; hypersensitivity reactions; increased risk of suicidal thoughts or behaviour, renal failure*. See PI
for details. Interactions with other medicines: CNS depressants; alcohol; lorazepam; oxycodone; medications causing constipation. See PI for details. Adverse effects: Very common: dizziness, somnolence,
headache. Common: dry mouth, weight gain, blurred vision, fatigue, nausea, peripheral oedema, constipation*, disturbance in attention*, balance disorder, nasopharyngitis*, diarrhoea*, sedation, euphoric mood*,
increased appetite*, insomnia*, tremor*, vomiting*, memory impairment*, back pain*, vertigo*, ataxia, abnormal coordination*, arthralgia*, lethargy*, diplopia, confusion*, muscle cramp*, cervical spasm*, paraesthesia*,
hypoaesthesia*, flatulence*, pain in limb*, oedema*, feeling drunk*, dysarthria*, abdominal distension*, fall*, abnormal gait*, feeling abnormal*, irritability*, depression*, disorientation*, amnesia*, decreased libido*.
Post-marketing, serious: angioedema, allergic reaction, loss of consciousness, mental impairment, congestive heart failure, keratitis, pulmonary oedema. See PI for details. Dosage and Administration: 150 to
600 mg/day given orally as 2 divided doses. Neuropathic pain: start at 150 mg/day, increase to 300 mg/day after 3 to 7 days. If needed, increase to a maximum of 600 mg/day after a further 7 days. Epilepsy:
start at 150 mg/day, increase to 300 mg/day after 7 days. Maximum dose of 600 mg/day may be given after a further week. Renal impairment: reduce dose. See PI for details. Before prescribing, please
review Product Information available from Pfizer Australia Pty Ltd. V10414. Reference: 1. LYRICA Approved Product Information. 27 November 2014. Pfizer Australia Pty Ltd. 38-42 Wharf Road, West Ryde,
NSW 2114. Medical Information: 1800 675 229. ®Registered trademark. P9853 S&H 02/15 PFILY1024/ANZCA/ASM/FP/F
*Please
38
note changes to Product Information.
NEVER MISS A MINUTE OF THE ASM
By downloading the ASM app on your tablet or logging on to
the Virtual ASM on your smartphone or laptop you will be
able to access and view:
•
•
•
•
The scientific and social program
Abstracts of each presentation
ePosters
Webcasts of every presentation at the ASM
ASM Tablet App
Each presentation will be captured and uploaded for you to
view within 24 hours! Did you miss that session everyone is
talking about? Log onto the ASM app or Virtual ASM and see
the slides while listening to the presentation.
ASM APP
How to use the ANZCA ASM 2015 app?
Download the ANZCA ASM 2015 meeting app onto your tablet
device (iPad or Android) from the
or
A historical moment at the ASM
and bring it along on the day. Register for free by following
the prompts.
A
NZAC Day 2015 marks the centenary of
the landing at Gallipoli, a day on which we
remember all Australians and New Zealanders
who have served in the various conflicts and
peace-keeping missions over the last 100 years. Operations
have been performed in difficult, and often dangerous,
circumstances - the heat and sandstorms of the Egyptian
desert, the freezing mountains of Korea, the crowded,
canvas tents of World War II, and the sterile splendour
of the floating US naval ships in the Gulf War. Australian
and New Zealand doctors have provided anaesthesia in
all these situations, to military personnel and civilians,
to those with terrible injuries and those needing routine
surgical procedures. These resourceful and inventive
doctors often had no prior experience, learning how to
administer anaesthesia as the necessity arose. But, since
the development of specialist qualifications, specialist
anaesthetists have been available wherever they
were needed.
*Please note the app is only available to download on a tablet.
The ASM app is your one-stop-shop for the ASM. In addition to
the features outlined above the app will allow you to:
•
•
•
•
•
Take notes and save them against a presentation- log on and print them later
Send questions to the chair of a session during a presentation
Participate in live polls
Create your own personalised meeting schedule
Access a floor plan of the venue
VIRTUAL ASM
How to use the Virtual ASM?
Not bringing your tablet to the meeting? No problem! You
can access the Virtual ASM on your laptop or smart phone
to access the many features above. Bookmark the webpage:
asm.anzca.edu.au/virtual-asm
*Please note these features require an internet connection.
Wi-Fi will be provided at the Adelaide Convention Centre
Join the ASM 2015 community by downloading the ASM
app on your tablet or log onto the Virtual ASM on your
smartphone and never miss a beat!
To compliment these sessions, the Geoffrey Kaye Museum
of Anaesthetic History will be staging a new display, in a
completely new format. Although those who live in or
visit Melbourne will be able to visit the cabinet display,
the rest of the Fellowship, and the general public, will be
able to visit the Museum’s first on-line display which will
be launched at the meeting. The display will be available
through the College website and encompasses stories from
the distant as well as the recent past. Many anaesthetists
who have served in our armed forces have contributed
information and photographs to this display and it covers
a great range and depth of subjects. A book has also been
produced from these contributions and will serve as a
lasting memory of the centenary.
These will be very special sessions. We invite you to
come and hear the experiences of those of us for whom
anaesthesia in isolated environments does not represent a
trip down the corridor to radiology.
The efforts of these anaesthetists often go unnoticed. They
quietly go about their work and then return to their civilian
practice with little fanfare or acknowledgement. And yet
we all benefit. Many of the things we use in our civilian
practice arose out of war time experiences - developments
in resuscitation, blood transfusion, evacuation of casualties
- even the treatment of phantom limb pains.
In honour of the centenary, a day of the ASM has been
dedicated to this subject. Papers will range from historical
stories retrieved from the battlefields of World War I to
the reflections of those who have served in more recent
conflicts and peace-keeping missions. There will be
presenters with an interest in history and others who have
lived through extraordinary experiences, often at great
personal cost.
40
41
BUSINESS MEETINGS
MEET THE CEO
AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND COLLEGE OF ANAESTHETISTS
ABN 82 055 042 852
The ANZCA CEO (Ms Linda Sorrell) will be available at the morning tea break from Saturday to Tuesday to
answer any queries Fellows and Trainees may have about the College administration.
NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING
Notice is hereby given that the annual general meeting of the Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists (ANZCA) will be
held on Sunday May 3, 2015, commencing at 5.00pm, in Halls L and M (ground floor) of the Adelaide Convention Centre, North
Terrace Adelaide, South Australia.
Date/Time: 10-10.30am Saturday May 2- Monday May 4
10.30-11am Tuesday May 5
Venue:
ANZCA Lounge, booth numbers 45 and 46
Saturday May 2, 2015
Time
Room
Airway Management SIG AGM
noon-12:30pm
Hall G
Perioperative Medicine SIG Business Meeting
noon-12.30pm
Riverbank R7
Trauma SIG AGM
noon-12.30pm
Hall K
Obstetric SIG Business Meeting
3-3.30pm
Hall G
Acute Pain SIG AGM
5-5.30pm
City rooms C1 & C2
Sunday May 3, 2015
Overseas Aid Committee
7-8am
Panorama Suite
The Anaesthesia and Critical Care in Unusual and Transport Environments
(ACCUTE) SIG AGM
noon-12.30pm
Hall K
FPM AGM
noon-12.30pm
City rooms C1 & C2
FPM New Board Meeting
12.30-1.30pm
Panorama Suite
Communication in Anaesthesia SIG AGM
3-3.30pm
Panorama Ballroom
Anaesthesia Continuing Education Co-ordinating Committee Meeting (ACECC)
3-5pm
Panorama Suite
ANZCA AGM
5-5.30pm
Halls L & M
FPM Research Committee Meeting
5-6pm
Panorama Suite
Monday May 4, 2015
BUSINESS
1. To confirm the minutes of the ANZCA annual general meeting held on May 7, 2014.
2. To receive and consider the report of the ANZCA Council presented by the president.
3. To consider the annual financial reports, and the auditor’s report.
4. To consider the Honorary Treasurer’s report.
5. To declare the result of the election of members of ANZCA Council.
6. Other business of which due notice has been given to the chief executive officer in accordance with the constitution of the College.
By order of the ANZCA Council
Linda Sorrell
Chief Executive Officer
ANZCA New Council Meeting
7.30-8.45am
Panorama Suite
2016 ASM ROC Meeting
10.30am-noon
Hall L2
Australia and New Zealand Anaesthetic Allergy Group (ANZAAG) Business
Meeting
10.30am-noon
Hall L3
Anaesthesia and Industry Liaison Committee (AILC) Meeting
1.30-2.30pm
Hall L2
Diving and Hyperbaric Medicine (DHM) SIG AGM
3-3.30pm
City rooms C1 & C2
Management SIG Business Meeting
10.30-11am
Hall J
Welfare SIG Business Meeting
10.30-11.30am Hall L2
Future Convenors Meeting
12.30-1.30pm
Hall L2
ANZCA Clinical Trials Network Executive Meeting
12.30-1.30pm
Panorama Suite
Medical Education SIG Business Meeting
3-3.30pm
Hall J
Tuesday May 5, 2015
ABN 82 055 042 852
ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING
The Annual General Meeting of the Faculty of Pain Medicine, Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists, will be held on
Sunday, 3 May 2015 commencing at 12.00 noon, City Rooms C1 and C2, upper level at the Adelaide Convention Centre, North
Terrace, Adelaide, South Australia.
AGENDA
1. Apologies.
2. To confirm the minutes of the FPM annual general meeting held on May 7, 2014.
3. To receive and consider the report of the FPM Board presented by the Dean.
4. To receive the annual financial reports.
5. To receive the declaration of the poll for election of members to the Board.
6. Dean’s Prize Presentation (if awarded)
7. Best Free Paper Award (if awarded)
8. Other business of which due notice has been given to the General Manager in accordance with the by-laws of the Faculty.
By order of the Board
Helen M Morris
General Manager
42
43
SOCIAL PROGRAM
All social functions require a ticket for admission.
Welcome Reception
Date:
Friday May 1, 2015
Time: 5-7pm
Venue:
Foyer L, Adelaide Convention Centre
Cost:
Additional tickets: $55 per adult, $25 per child
The registration desk will be open from 5-7pm. Drop into the Adelaide
Convention Centre and collect your registration information to avoid the
Saturday morning rush. Catch up with old acquaintances and make new
friends, familiarise yourself with the venue and get into the mood for a
great meeting!
College Ceremony Rehearsal
Date: Saturday May 2, 2015
Time: 10-10.30am
Venue: Halls L and M, Adelaide Convention Centre
After collecting morning tea, new Fellows for presentation are asked
to attend the rehearsal in Hall L and M, where we will run through the
proceedings for the ceremony and any questions can be answered.
ANZCA Trainee Luncheon
Date:
Time:
Venue:
Cost: Saturday May 2, 2015
noon-1.30pm
Panorama Suite, Adelaide Convention Centre
Inclusive for all full and weekend trainee delegates registered to attend the meeting.
The 2015 Organising Committee would like to invite all trainees registered
for the ASM to a complimentary luncheon to be held in the beautiful
Panorama suite. This is a great opportunity for trainees to meet and mingle
with senior colleagues, ASM visiting speakers and key College leaders.
FPM Trainee Luncheon
Date:
Time:
Venue:
Cost: Saturday May 2, 2015
noon-1.30pm
L3, Adelaide Convention Centre
This function is included for FPM trainee delegates registered to attend the meeting.
The Faculty invites all pain medicine trainees registered for the ASM to a
complimentary luncheon. This is your chance to enjoy a wonderful meal
and meet well known names in the Australasian and international pain
medicine community.
College Ceremony
Date: Time:
Venue:
Cost:
Dress:
HCI Reception
Date:
Time:
Venue:
Cost: Note: Sunday May 3, 2015
5.30-7pm
Exhibition area, Hall H, Adelaide Convention Centre
Inclusive for full, weekend and new Fellow registrants.
Additional tickets $65
In order to adhere to the policies within Medicines
Australia’s code of conduct, we regret that children
and non-medical accompanying persons are not
permitted to attend this event.
A cocktail reception will be held in the exhibition area to acknowledge the
generous support of the Healthcare Industry that through its sponsorship,
allows us to deliver a meeting of the highest quality. As a special treat, we
invite you to come and taste some of South Australia’s finest wines. Four of
South Australia’s top wineries have generously offered to showcase their
wines for the occasion. Taste wines from The Lane in the Adelaide Hills,
Greenoch Creek in the Barossa, Parker Coonawarra Estate and SC Parnnell.
Order forms will be available to purchase wine if desired.
Anaesthesia and Pain Medicine Foundation Cocktail Reception
Date: Sunday May 3, 2015
Time: 7-9pm Venue: Ballroom 2, The Playford
Cost: Complimentary
The Anaesthesia and Pain Medicine Foundation invites delegates registered
for the ASM to attend a cocktail reception. The Foundation supports medical
research and education, raising funds to increase the safety and comfort of
patients undergoing anaesthesia, improve outcomes for critically ill patients
following surgery or trauma and improve treatment of acute pain, cancer
pain and persistent non-cancer pain. Come along and mingle with some well
known names in the Australasian and international anaesthetic and pain
medicine community and hear the highlights of the research and education
support program.
Retired Anaesthetists'’ Luncheon
Saturday May 2, 2015
6-7.30pm
Halls L and M, Adelaide Convention Centre
Inclusive for all registrants and their families. No
ticket is required to attend the ceremony however
the reception following will be ticketed.
Stage Party: Black tie and College/Faculty gown or academic dress
Guests: Formal/lounge suit. College/Faculty gown or academic dress is preferred.
The College Ceremony is the formal presentation ceremony of new Fellows
for ANZCA and FPM. Join us to celebrate this milestone and welcome our
newest colleagues. We will also acknowledge through the presentations of
awards and medals, the exceptional contributions to our field of medicine.
Ms Gill Hicks will be delivering the oration at this year’s College Ceremony.
Severely and permanently injured in the London bombings of July 7, 2005,
Gill Hicks lost both legs from below the knee. She discovered a great inner
strength not only to fight for her life that morning but to learn to walk again
using prosthetic legs. Gill Hicks is well known for her inspirational talks
focusing on achievement over adversity.
44
College Ceremony COCKTAIL RECEPTION
Date: Saturday May 2, 2015
Time:
7.30-11.30pm
Venue:
Art Gallery of South Australia
Cost: Inclusive for full, weekend and new Fellow registrants.
Additional tickets $150 per adult.
Note:
Entrance will be via main doors on North Terrace.
The College Ceremony Cocktail Reception will be held this year in the
beautiful Art Gallery of South Australia. Enter via the front of the Gallery and
wander through the art collection of the Elder Wing before descending into
the Elysium fields, a place of beauty and indulgence reserved for the chosen
ones. Our new Fellows join us to celebrate the start of their glittering careers
in the magical ambiance of the Gallery. A night not to be missed!
Date: Monday May 4, 2015
Time:
noon-1.30pm
Venue:
Panorama Suite, Adelaide Convention Centre
Cost: Inclusive for retired anaesthetist registrations.
This luncheon is inclusive for delegates registered under the retired
anaesthetist category and provides an ideal opportunity to catch up with
old friends and make new acquaintances.
Gala Dinner
Date:
Monday May 4, 2015
Time:
7pm-midnight
Venue:
Halls F/G, Adelaide Convention Centre
Cost:
$220*
Dress:
Black tie/lounge suit, cocktail dress
Welcome to the “2015: An Anaesthetic Odyssey” Gala Dinner. The future
beckons you to this extravaganza of light and sound. Join us for pre-dinner
drinks in the foyer of the Adelaide Convention Centre overlooking the
beautiful river Torrens looking out upon our brand new Adelaide Oval.
Enjoy fine wine, a three-course meal and entertainment and boogie til late.
For those who need a break from the party, head to the Supper Club where
you can sit and chat with friends over a drink or freshly brewed coffee.
*Please note that the Gala Dinner will be an additional cost for all delegates.
45
OPTIONAL ACTIVITIES
Open to delegates and their partner/family. Please note all activities are
subject to cancellation unless minimum numbers are met.
Digital photographic workshops
Led by award winning and internationally published nature and adventure
photographer, Craig Ingram, these short course instructional photographic
workshops are designed to enhance your technical execution and visionary
skills.
OA01 Introduction to digital photography
Date:
Saturday May 2, 2015
Time:
10.30am-noon
Venue:
C3 Adelaide Convention Centre
Cost:
$55
This workshop is ideal if you are new to DSLR photography and would like
to learn the basics of how to control your camera so that you can get the
most out of it and can start taking steps to improve your photography.
Don’t forget to bring along your camera!
Tailored to the needs of photographers on the day, via an interactive
discussion, it is aimed to suit all comers from beginner to advanced,
emphasising the desire to create images with visual impact. Craig
has worked for clients around the globe bringing his unique style and
dedication to help communicate the beauty and importance of our natural
heritage and tell the stories on the edge of human achievement.
During the session we will cover the following concepts and skills:
•
The role of camera’s aperture and shutter speed to control the
amount of light that the camera needs to make a picture.
•
The differences between the A or Av, S or Tv, M, P and fully automatic
camera modes;
•
The concept of exposure;
•
The implications of different aperture and shutter speed selections;
•
The purpose and implications of different ISO settings;
•
The importance of ‘white balance’ settings.
In this workshop we generally cover the following:
•
Review the histogram and the concept of dynamic range;
Discuss RAW versus JPEG files;
•
Depth of field control;
•
Introduce basic composition principles and the elements of image
design;
•
Explore the nature and quality of light.
OA02 Advanced digital photography
46
Date:
Time:
Cost:
Sunday May 3, 2015
8am
Free
Notes:
OA03 Walking tour of Adelaide CBD
When:
Saturday May 2, 2015
Time:
10.30am-12.30pm
Cost:
$30 per adult $10 per child
Meeting point:
Adelaide Convention Centre
Join your passionate guide from Yella Umbrella who will take you on a
journey through historic Adelaide and immerse you in South Australia’s
heritage. Visit the Pioneer Women’s garden, migration museum, historic
arcades, the Town Hall and Victoria Square before finishing at the
Central Market.
OA04 Barossa food and wine trip
Date:
Sunday May 3, 2015
Time:
9am-5pm
Cost:
$195 per person (includes coach transportation, guide, wine tasting and lunch).
Transport:
Depart Adelaide Convention Centre 9am
and returns 5pm
Travel north through the Adelaide Hills to one of South Australia’s premier
wine regions, the Barossa Valley. The tour will include private tasting at
Peter Lehmann, lunch at Vintner‘s Bar and Grill and sightseeing at Mengler
Hill. Vintner Bar’s Head chef, winemaker and co-owner Peter Clarke uses
his extensive knowledge of the Barossa, to produce distinctive, unfussed,
balanced dishes. You will travel through the historic town of Bethany and
visit Maggie Beer’s Farmshop, where you can see the kitchen in which she
produced her show “The Cook and the Chef”.
OA05 Nun run
Date:
Saturday May 2, 2015
Time:
1.30-3pm
Venue:
C3 Adelaide Convention Centre
Cost:
$55
This workshop continues on from the Introduction to Digital Photography
workshop. As well as introducing some more advanced camera controls,
we start to consider topics such as composition and light, two of the
most important ingredients in photography. Don’t forget to bring along
your camera! Tailored to the needs of photographers on the day, via an
interactive discussion, it is aimed to suit all comers from beginner to
advanced, emphasising the desire to create images with visual impact.
Craig has worked for clients around the globe bringing his unique style and
dedication to help communicate the beauty and importance of our natural
heritage and tell the stories on the edge of human achievement.
OA06 Cycling in the hills
Date:
Sunday May 3, 2015
Time:
7am
Cost:
Free
Notes:
Travel distance is approximately 7km.
We will meet at the Torrens footbridge on the riverside of the Adelaide Convention Centre.
Due to the gradient of the hills we encourage participants to have an intermediate fitness level.
Come and join us for the inaugural Nun Run! Start on the riverside of the
Adelaide Convention Centre, up King William Rd to St Peter’s Cathedral,
through North Adelaide, back down Montefiore Hill, along North Terrace,
down King William Rd to Victoria Square to St Xavier Francis Cathedral,
along Flinders St and Pirie St finishing at Scots Church North Terrace. Revive
yourself with a coffee at East Terrace Continental before heading back to
the convention centre. The run will pass eight churches in all! Habits
aren’t compulsory!
Meet at the entrance to Intercontinental Hotel,
North Terrace at 7:45am. Bring your own road bike
or get in early (limited numbers!) to hire a quality
bike from Velo‐Porte www.velo‐porte.com. Wearing
a helmet is compulsory in South Australia. Be sure to
bring 2 water bottles and sufficient food to sustain
your energy for the entire ride.
Be guided through some of the classic climbs and beautiful scenery of the
Adelaide hills by your local colleagues. For experienced cyclists only, this 4
hour ride will include the local favourite Norton Summit climb and take in
the UCI Tour Down Under route through Lenswood and Gorge Road and
up the challenging 9% average (14% peak) gradient of Corkscrew Road. All
riders will cover a minimum 80km and climb at least 1850 vertical metres.
This introduction will enable further free time exploration of the hills over
the remaining days of the conference. We encourage experienced cyclists
only. Also, visit www.bicyclenetwork.com.au to ensure you are covered
with appropriate insurance all year round.
Join your fellow delegates in a morning of golf at one of Adelaide’s prestige
golf courses, the Royal Adelaide Golf Club. The fairly open links style course
is regularly ranked within the top 100 world courses, with the picturesque
14th hole rated one of the top 100 holes in the world. The course has
hosted the Australian Open nine times during its history. A light lunch with
refreshments will be served following the round providing a opportunity to
mingle with your fellow golfers and discuss what was, or could have been,
a fantastic round of golf.
OA07 A TASTE of Grange, Magill Estate
Date: Sunday May 3, 2015
Time: 1.30-4pm
Cost:
$185 per person (includes coach transportation, tour of Magill Estate with tastings of Grange and
cheese platter).
Transport:
Departs Adelaide Convention Centre 1.30pm and returns 4pm
Travel into Adelaide foothills to the Magill Estate Vineyard, established
in 1844 by Christopher and Mary Penfold. Savour Penfolds Grange - an
Australian icon, a heritage listed wine, protected by the National Trust and other Penfolds top-flight wine. This unforgettable experience includes
a tour of vineyard, cellar and historic cottage.
OA08 Golf
Date:
Time:
Venue:
Cost:
Transport:
Note:
Monday May 4, 2015
8.30am-3pm
Royal Adelaide Golf Club
$220 (includes lunch, transport and green fee).
Club hire: $50
Delegates to meet at the Intercontinental entrance of the Adelaide Convention Centre and will be transported by coach to and from the Golf Club.
Please indicate requirement for club hire.
OA10 Cooking class at Sticky Rice Cooking School
Date:
Monday May 4, 2015
Time:
9.30am-2.30pm
Cost:
$170 per person (includes coach transportation, cooking class and lunch).
Transport:
Depart Adelaide Convention Centre 9.30am
and return 2.30pm. Travel time is approximately 30 minutes each way.
This cooking school is a unique world class experience for food lovers
and groups. Top guest chefs teach hands on cooking classes in Asian and
Middle Eastern Cuisine in the inspiring designer premises. Participants will
learn how to create a range of quality dishes in a hands-on cooking class
followed by a group lunch to savour their hard work.
OA11 Walk up Mt Lofty
Date:
Monday May 4, 2015
Time:
Departs 7am returns 10.30am
Cost:
$55 per person (includes coach transportation and breakfast at the Mt Lofty Cafe).
Transport:
Bus departs Adelaide Convention Centre. Buses to be provided for drop off at Waterfall Gully and Pickup at Mt Lofty at 10am
A 25 minute bus journey will take you to the beautiful Waterfall Gully at
the bottom of Mt Lofty. Then follows a 3.9km climb to the top up steep
terrain. This walk is not for the faint hearted! At the top of Mt Lofty
you can enjoy breakfast and coffee at the Mt Lofty Café whilst taking
in sweeping views of Adelaide and surrounds before returning to the
Conference Centre.
47
OPTIONAL ACTIVITIES (CONTINUED)
OA12 Central Market Tour
Date:
Tuesday May 5, 2015
Time:
8.30-11.30am
Venue:
Central Market, Providore, Stall 66.
Cost:
$80 per person (includes market breakfast, sample and market tour).
Transport:
It is a 10 minute tram ride from Adelaide Convention Centre (alight at Victoria Square)
The Adelaide Central Market is just 3 stops on the tram from Adelaide
Railway Station to Victoria Square. This lively market has been the centre
for fresh produce for Adelaide since 1869. The Adelaide Central Market
remains the food Mecca for multicultural cuisine and fresh produce. Enjoy
a delicious market breakfast and then join the gourmet walking tour with a
local food expert.
Optional local Adelaide tours
Other recommended tours to consider self booking:
Adelaide oval tour
Cost:
$20 per adults $10 per child
The Adelaide Oval offers a unique blend of new and old. Book a tour to
take you behind the scenes to the inner workings of this iconic ground,
including the opportunity to view the Donald Bradman collection. Tours
operate Monday to Friday from 11am to 2pm.
www.adelaideoval.com.au
Haighs Chocolate Tour
It was May 1, 1915 when Alfred E Haigh opened the doors of the very first
Haigh’s Chocolates store at 34 King William Street, Adelaide. Learn more
about chocolate in a behind the scenes free tour of the Haigh’s factory
including special chocolate tastings.
www.haighschocolates.com.au/tours/
Kangaroo Island Tour- one day
Cost:
$248 per adult $150 per child
Notes:
Delegates and family can book any day and
quote the code “ANZCA ASM 2015” to receive a 10% discount for this and all tours found in the Adelaide Sightseeing brochure when booked by email or phone.
Kangaroo Island is a beautiful place to visit. With spectacular beaches
and amazing wildlife it’s one of South Australia’s best kept secrets! Pick
up is from your hotel in Adelaide at 6.45am and return at 10.45pm. The
tour includes a scenic coach ride to Cape Jervis, a 45 minute ferry transfer
to Kangaroo Island, a guided tour around Seal Bay and a visit to Flinders
Chase National Park including Remarkable Rocks, Admirals Arch and
Hanson Bay Sanctuary Koala Walk. Lunch is a two course meal at Vivonne
Bay Bistro, set in beautiful bushland. For bookings visit
www.sealink.com.au or call 13 13 01.
Art Gallery of South Australia
Founded in 1881, the Art Gallery of South Australia is home to one
of Australia’s great art collections, housed in one of Australia’s most
beautiful buildings. A must see! Open 10am to 5pm daily.
www.artgallery.sa.gov.au
OA14 McLaren Vale all day food and wine tour
Date:
Tuesday May 5, 2015
Time:
9am-5pm
Cost:
$277 per person (includes coach transportation, tasting and lunch).
Transport:
Depart 9am Adelaide Convention Centre and return 5pm
The tour travels through the picturesque town of Clarendon to Coriole
winery. Coriole’s cellar door produces an outstanding range of wines, olives,
olive oils and cheeses. We then visit d’Arenberg winery, where you will
have a very special experience blending your own wine that will be yours
to take home.Lunch will be at the d’Arrys Veranda restaurant located in the
winery where you will enjoy a sensational two-course lunch (with a glass of
wine provided with each course) and panoramic views over the McLaren
Vale vineyards. After lunch the tour will visit Primo Estate to taste their fine
Italian style wines and olive oils, then visit the scenic village of Willunga and
take in an exhibition of local art.
DISCLAIMER
Optional activities are undertaken by individuals at their own
choosing and at their own risk. Optional activities are run in addition
to the official program of the 2015 annual scientific meeting.
People are reminded that for physical activities (cycling, walking) they
choose to participate in, an appropriate level of fitness is required
and, it is the responsibility of the individual that their equipment
is reliable and in good condition and that they have in place
appropriate and adequate insurance for their chosen activity.
ANZCA accepts no responsibility for changes in times, availability,
access or information in relation to optional activities through or with
by third party providers.
48
Botanic Gardens
Take a walk through the beautiful botanic gardens next to Adelaide Zoo.
Located in the heart of the city Adelaide Botanic Garden is a sanctuary of
exotic and native plants, iconic cultural collections and historic buildings.
www.botanicgardens.sa.gov.au
Glenelg
Glenelg, located only 10km from the heart of Adelaide City, is a charming
seaside resort set on the long sandy white shores of Holdfast Bay and is
the site of South Australia’s original mainland settlement in 1836.
www.glenelg.com.au
National Wine Centre
The National Wine centre is an architectural treat located on the edge of
Adelaide’s stunning Botanic Gardens and showcases the Australian
wine industry.
www.wineaustralia.com.au
South Australian Museum
The South Australian Museum is a natural history museum and is one
of the most visited museums in Australia. A highlight for the kids is the
amazing giant squid! Open daily 10am to 5pm.
www.samuseum.sa.gov.au
Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute
Australia’s oldest Aboriginal-owned and managed multi-arts centre is
located on Grenfell Street, Adelaide.
www.tandanya.com.au
Torrens River bike hire
Cycle to the beach on the Torrens Linear Way, a sealed track which can be
accessed from the riverside of the Adelaide Convention Centre and takes
you all the way to Henley Beach (round trip ~ 20Km). Get a free rental
bike from Bicycle SA in Franklin Street or from the Torrens Pier area (in
front of the Adelaide Festival Centre).
49
Restaurant Suggestions
Within 15 minutes walking distance....
A short taxi ride away.....
Bistro Dom
Andrés Cucina and Polenta Bar
Shop no 1, 24 Waymouth Street, Adelaide (12 minutes walk)
French in its inspiration, Bistro Dom sources local produce and a
selection of French wines.
www.bistrodom.com.au
Phone: +61 8 8231 7000
94 Frome Street, Adelaide
www.andrescucina.com.au
Phone: +61 8 8224 0004
Cos Restaurant
18 Leigh Street, Adelaide
Enjoy modern Australian cuisine showcasing the finest and
freshest local produce.
www.justcos.com.au/asp/restaurant
Phone: +61 8 8231 7611
Jamie’s Italian
2 King William Street, Adelaide (5 minutes walk)
Opened in 2014. Adelaide’s newest restaurant!
www.jamieoliver.com
Phone: +61 8 8710 95000
Peel St
9 Peel Street, Adelaide (9 minutes walk)
The Chefs at Peel Street draw on their diverse food experiences
to produce great Asian, Middle Eastern and Modern Australian
food for guests.
www.peelst.com.au
Phone: +61 8 8231 8887
Rigoni’s Bistro
27 Leigh Street, Adelaide (8 minutes walk)
www.rigonis.com.au
Phone: +61 8 8231 5160
Shiki
Intercontinental Hotel, North Terrace, Adelaide (3 minutes walk)
www.icadelaide.com.au/dining/shiki
Phone: +61 8 8238 2400
50
Chianti
160 Hutt Street, Adelaide
An Adelaide institution for over 30 years. An elegant
dining experience.
www.chianti.net.au
Phone: +61 8 82327955
Golden Boy Botanic Bar
309 North Terrace, Adelaide
www.goldenboyrestaurant.com
Phone: +61 8 8227 0799
Jasmine Indian Restaurant
31 Hindmarsh Square, Adelaide
www.jasmin.com.au
Phone: +61 8 8223 7837
Ruby Red Flamingo
142 Tynte Street, North Adelaide
www.rubyredflamingo.com
Phone: +61 8 8267 5769
You may also consider wandering down Gouger Street for a huge
range of choice in Chinese, Thai, Korean and Japanese food.
Gouger Street is a five minute taxi ride and is Adelaide’s
Chinatown. It is also where the Central Markets can be found with
a huge array of wonderful foods including cheeses, chocolates
and fabulous coffee.
Rundle St East is the place to be for Greek, Italian and Argentinian
restaurants as well as trendy clothing shops. It’s a twenty minute
walk or a nine minute taxi ride.
51
HEALTHCARE INDUSTRY SPONSORS AND EXHIBITORS
EXHIBITION FLOORPLAN
HEALTHCARE INDUSTRY SPONSORS AND EXHIBITORS
The HCI exhibition area will be open as per the following times:
Saturday May 2 8am – 5.30pm
Sunday May 3
8am - 5.30pm
Monday May 4
8am – 7pm
Tuesday May 5
8am – 3.30pm
Name badges will be required for entry at all times, and in accordance with the Medicines Australia Code of Conduct, children will not be
permitted to enter the exhibition area at any time.
EXHIBITORS
COMPANY
BOOTH
NUMBER/S
COMPANY
BOOTH
NUMBER/S
3M
32
GE
11 & 12
Abbvie
2
Haemonetics
65 & 66
Admedus
13
Haemoview Diagnostics
41
AFT Pharmaceuticals
47
IMD-Soft
63
Allscripts
76
Intersurgical
26
AMBU
29
Karl Storz
21
ANZCA Annual Scientific Meeting 2016
44
Link Healthcare
62
ANZCA and FPM
45 & 46
M4
25
ANZCA - Geoffrey Kaye Museum of Anaesthetic
History
80
Maquet Australia Pty Ltd
1
Anaesthetic Private Practice
5
Masimo Pty Ltd
4
AON Hewitt Financial
4
MDA National
53
ASA
75
Medibroker
28
Aspen
20
Medical Business Systems
72
Ausstat/Kiwis STAT
79
Meditrust
19
Avant
61
Mercury Medical
59
Baxter
9
Mindray
18
Bbraun
22
Mobito
7
Bosco Medical
6
Molnlycke Healthcare
14
Complete Financial Balance
4
MSD
30
Cook Medical
8
Mundipharma Pty Ltd
42
Covidien
24
National Blood Authority
70
CR Kennerdy
17
Perpetual Private
15
Pfizer
43
38
Phillips
23
Device Technologies
33
Priority Life
55
Direct Control
74
RAPP Australia
57
Draeger Medical Australia Pty Ltd
48 & 49
Rem Systems Pty Ltd
51
Edwards
58
Teleflex
40
Flinders University
10
Terumo
78
Fresenuis Kabi
27
Verathon
34
Fujiflim Sonosite
52
Vifor Pharma
54 & 56
bioCSL Pty Ltd
CSL Behring
CATERING TIMES
All catering will be served within the HCI exhibitor area, from Saturday May 2 to Tuesday May 5, 2015 at the following times:
52
Saturday May 2
Sunday May 3
Monday May 4
Tuesday May 5
Morning tea
10-10.30am
10-10.30am
10-10.30am
10.30-11am
Lunch
noon-1.30pm
noon-1.30pm
noon-1.30pm
12.30-1.30pm
Afternoon tea
3-3.30pm
3-3.30pm
3-3.30pm
3-3.30pm
53
HEALTHCARE INDUSTRY EXHIBITOR PROFILES
ANZCA - FPM
3M
Contact:
Address:
Booth 32
Deborah Giblett
Building A, 1 Rivett Road
North Ryde, NSW 2113
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 2 9498 9127
+61 4 08 905 246
[email protected]
www.3M.com.au/healthcare
Abbvie
Contact:
Address:
Rebecca Reid
Level 7, 241 O’Riordon Street
Mascot, NSW 2020
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 2 9035 8600
+61 4 78 322 082
[email protected]
www.abbvie.com.au
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
Irena Nikovic
296 Burns Bay Road
Lane Cove, NSW 2066
+61 2 9420 0420
[email protected]
www.aftpharm.com/au
Allscripts
Contact:
Address:
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 2 8925 3926
+61 4 00 470 740
[email protected]
www.allscripts.com
www.iprocedures.co
AMBU
Contact:
Address:
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
1300 233 118
+61 4 17 285 096
[email protected]
www.ambu.com
Anaesthetic Private Practice
Contact:
Address:
Glen Beumer
PO Box 542
Ashgrove, QLD 4060
+61 7 3103 3153
+61 4 02 417 671
[email protected]
www.anaestheticprivatepractice.com.au
Contact:
Address:
Contact:
Address:
Contact:
Address:
Contact:
Address:
Contact:
Address:
Contact:
Address:
Michal Kluger
ANZCA House
630 St Kilda Road
Melbourne, VIC 3004
Booth 44
Phone:
Email:
Website:
+61 3 9510 6299
[email protected]
www.asm.anzca.edu.au
ANZCA
Address:
54
Phone:
Website:
Email:
+61 3 9510 6299
www.anzca.edu.au
[email protected] [email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
Phone:
Email:
Website:
+61 3 8517 5309
[email protected]
www.anzca.edu.au/resources/geoffrey-kaye-museum
Booth 4
Jon Silcock
142 Gilles Street
Adelaide, SA 5000
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 8 8359 2111
+61 4 07 699 688
[email protected]
www.aonhewitt.com.au
Booth 75
Nicola Morgan
Level 8, 121 Walker Street
North Sydney, NSW 2060
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 2 8556 9724
+61 4 04 572 828
[email protected]
www.asa.org.au
Booth 20
Sharon Brouillard
34-36 Chandos Street
St Leonards, NSW 2065
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 2 8436 8315
+61 4 00 814303
[email protected]
www.aspenpharma.com.au
Irene Fussell
PO Box 3087
Hendra, QLD 4011
Booth 79
Phone:
Email:
Website:
1800 422 966 ext 974
[email protected]
www.ausstat.com.au
Level 28, 580 George Street
Sydney, NSW 2000
Booth 61
Phone:
Email:
Website:
+61 2 9260 9000
[email protected]
www.avant.org.au
Baxter Healthcare
Booth 45 & 46
ANZCA House
630 St Kilda Road
Melbourne, VIC 3004
Monica Cronin
ANZCA House
630 St Kilda Road
Melbourne, VIC 3003
Booth 80
Avant Mutual Group
Address:
ANZCA Annual Scientific Meeting 2016 (ASM 2016)
+64 4 499 1213
www.anzca.org.nz
[email protected]
Ausstat/Kiwis STAT
Booth 5
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
Phone:
Website:
Email:
Aspen
Booth 29
Erika O’Donnell
Unit 2, 1 Prosperity Pde
Warriewood, NSW 2102
Level 7, EMC House
5 Willeston Street
Wellington 6011 New Zealand
Booth 45 & 46
ASA
Booth 76
Robert Barley
Level 9, 2 Elizabeth Plaza
North Sydney, NSW 2060
+61 3 8517 5302
[email protected]
www.fpm.anzca.edu.au
Hewitt Financial
Booth 47
Phone:
Email:
Website:
Phone:
Email:
Website:
ANZCA Geoffrey Kaye Museum of Anaesthetic History
1300 550 310
+61 4 17 747 44
[email protected]
www.admedus.com
AFT Pharmaceuticals
Contact:
Address:
Address:
Booth 13
Neale Norman
Unit 14, Ground Floor, Highpoint
Plaza, 240 Waterworks Road
Ashgrove, QLD 4060
Penny McMorran
ANZCA House
630 St Kilda Road
Melbourne, VIC 3004
ANZCA - New Zealand
Booth 2
Admedus
Contact:
Address:
Contact:
Address:
Booth 45 & 46
Contact:
Address:
Tanya Bradford & Melinda Taylor
1 Baxter Drive
Old Toongabbie, NSW 2146
Booth 9
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 4 19 880 056 (Tanya)
+61 4 17 555 727 (Melinda)
[email protected]
[email protected]
www.baxterhealthcare.com.au
Bbraun
Contact:
Address:
Booth 22
Jay Pronte
Level 5, 7-9 Irvine Place
Bella Vista, NSW 2153
Phone:
Email:
Website:
+61 2 9421 2031
[email protected]
www.bbraun.com.au
55
HEALTHCARE INDUSTRY EXHIBITOR PROFILES (CONTINUED)
Direct Control
bioCSL Pty Ltd
Contact:
Address:
Booth 38
Greg Blake
63 Poplar Road
Parkville, VIC 3052
Phone:
Website:
+61 3 9389 2000
www.biocsl.com.au
As part of the CSL Group, bioCSL is fully owned by CSL Limited which is a global, specialty biopharmaceutical group that
researches, develops, manufactures and markets products to treat and prevent serious human medical conditions. Based
in Melbourne, bioCSL continues CSL’s long-standing tradition of manufacturing and marketing medical products for the
Australian population. Most notably, in Australia, bioCSL is a major global supplier of our own locally manufactured
influenza vaccine. In addition to its own products, bioCSL specialises in marketing a wide range of in-licensed products
which includes an increasing focus on therapies designed for the treatment of pain.
Vanessa Johnson
78 Waterloo Road
North Ryde, NSW 2113
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 2 8875 8800
+61 4 66 779 238
[email protected]
www.boehringer-ingelheim.com.au
Bosco Medical
Contact:
Address:
Booth 6
Bianca Raine
2/49 Borthwick Ave
Murarrine, QLD 4172
Phone:
Mobile
Email:
Website:
1800 026 726
+61 4 13 813 244
[email protected]
www.boscomed.com.au
Complete Financial Balance
Contact:
Address:
Sarah Valent
Suite 14-18, Level 3
17 Bowen Ridge Road
Herston, QLD 4006
Phone:
Email:
Website:
Laura Ogilvie
PO Box 4002
Eight Mile Plains, QLD 4113
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
Tara Britton
2/40 Talavera Road
North Ryde, NSW 2113
Phone:
Email:
Website:
1800 372 437
[email protected]
www.draeger.com
Booth 58
Phone:
Email:
Website:
+61 2 8899 6300
[email protected]
www.edwards.com
Flinders University
Lori Tietz
PO Box 852
Renmark, SA 5341
Booth 10
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 8 8586 1026
+61 4 17 810 601
[email protected]
www.flinders.edu.au/clinical-ed
Fresenius Kabi Australia
Address:
964 Pacific Highway
Pymble, NSW 2073
Booth 27
Phone:
Email:
Website:
1300 732 011
[email protected]
www.fresenius-kabi.com.au
Booth 52
Gina Kent
114 Old Pittwater Road
Brookevale, NSW 2100
Booth 24
Rick McAbee
Level One, 166 Epping Road
Lane Cove, NSW 2066
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
Graham Hines
300 Lorimer Street
Port Melbourne, VIC 3207
Contact:
Address:
Mr Ian Churchill
1 Garigal Rd
Belrose, NSW 2085
+61 2 9938 8700
+61 4 17 401 537
[email protected]
www.sonosite.com.au
Booth 11 & 12
Steven McLean
Level 5, 32 Phillip Street
Parramatta, NSW 2150
Phone:
Email:
Website:
+61 2 9846 4705
[email protected]
www.gehealthcare.com.au
Booth 17
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
Haemonetics
+61 3 9823 1577
+61 4 18 366 093
[email protected]
www.crkennedy.com.au/medical
Contact:
Address:
Booth 38
Kaye Nolan
189-209 Camp Road
Broadmeadows, VIC 3047
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
GE
+61 2 9429 3123
+61 4 21 052 664
[email protected]
www.covidien.com/rms/products
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 3 9246 5200
+61 4 17 036 341
[email protected]
www.cslbehring.com.au
Device Technologies
56
Contact:
Address:
Contact:
Address:
Booth 65 & 66
Miriam Chan
Suite D, Level 2, Everglade Campus
82 Waterloo Road
Macquarie Park, NSW 2113
Phone:
Email:
Website:
Haemoview Diagnostics
For over 50 years CSL Behring has been the chosen national plasma fractionator for Australia and New Zealand,
manufacturing effective, high quality therapies from each country’s plasma at our Melbourne facility, and contributing
alongside operations in USA, Germany and Switzerland to CSL Behring’s standing as a global leader in biotherapies.
Contact:
Address:
Customer service
8 Acacia Place
Notting Hill, VIC 3168
Booth 48 & 49
Fujiflim Sonosite
+61 7 3434 6000
+61 4 08 605 194
[email protected]
www.cookmedical.com
CSL Behring
Contact:
Address:
Contact:
Address:
+61 7 5478 5510
+61 4 27 493 193
[email protected]
www.directcontrol.com.au
Booth 8
C.R. Kennedy & Company Pty Ltd
Contact:
Address:
Draeger Medical Australia Pty Ltd
Contact:
Address:
+61 7 3257 3944
[email protected]
www.completefinancialbalance.com.au
Covidien
Contact:
Address:
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
Booth 4
Cook Medical
Contact:
Address:
John Peters
145 Western Avenue
Montville, QLD 4560
Edwards Lifesciences
Boehringer Ingelheim
Contact:
Address:
Contact:
Address:
Booth 74
Contact:
Address:
Violeta Jardin
Brisbane, QLD
1800 209 515
[email protected]
www.haemonetics.com
Booth 41
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 4 17 685 396
[email protected]
www.haemoview.com.au
Booth 33
Phone:
Email:
Website:
1300 DEVICE (338 423)
[email protected]
www.device.com.au
57
HEALTHCARE INDUSTRY EXHIBITOR PROFILES (CONTINUED)
Meditrust
IMD-Soft
Contact:
Address:
Booth 63
Toni Laracuente
16/99 Musgrave Road
Red Hill, QLD 4059
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 7 3011 9925
+61 4 27 866 176
[email protected]
www.imd-soft.com
Intersurgical Australia
Contact:
Address:
Paul O’Sullivan
4/151 Beauchamp Rd
Matraville, NSW 2036
Booth 26
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 2 8048 3300
+61 4 78 740 043
[email protected]
www.intersurgical.com.au
Karl Storz Endoscopy Australia
Contact:
Address:
Marianne Moreau
15 Orion Road
Lane Cove, NSW 2066
Booth 21
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
1800 966 562
+61 4 39 412 370
[email protected]
www.karlstorz.com
Link Healthcare
Contact:
Address:
Booth 62
Sabrina De Miranda
PO Box 135
Avalon, NSW 2107
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 4 09 393 619
[email protected]
www.linkhealthcare.com.au
M4 Healthcare Pty Ltd
Contact:
Address:
Debb Sasse
Unit 4, 30-32 Barcoo Street
Chatswood, NSW 2067
Booth 25
Phone:
Email:
Website:
+61 2 8080 4307
[email protected]
www.m4healthcare.com.au
Masimo
Contact:
Address:
Sarah Murray
Suite 3, Building 7
49 Frenchs Forest Rd
Frenchs Forest, NSW 2086
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
John Barrett
9/35 Paringa Road
Murarrie, QLD 4172
MDA National
Medibroker
58
1800 011 255
[email protected]
www.mdanational.com.au
Booth 28
Aaron Zelman
38 Glen Eira Road
Elsternwick, VIC 3185
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
Medical Business Systems
Contact:
Address:
+61 7 3339 3955
[email protected]
www.maquet.com
Booth 53
Phone:
Email:
Website:
Contact:
Address:
1300 MASIMO (627 466)
+61 4 01 251 017
[email protected]
www.masimo.com.uk
Booth 1
Phone:
Email:
Website:
Mark Laforest
PO Box R1991
Royal Exchange, NSW 1225
1300 140 088
+61 4 12 366 643
[email protected]
www.medibroker.com.au
Booth 72
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
Peter Granger
Level 1, 18 Kavanagh Street
Southbank, VIC 3006
Online Anaesthetic software and services
www.meditrust.com.au
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 2 4367 2200
+61 4 19 012 869
[email protected]
www.medicalbusinesssystems.com.au
1300 367 540
+61 4 17 368 739
[email protected]
www.meditrust.com.au
Mercury Medical
Contact:
Address:
Lizette Souder
11300 - 49th Street
North Clearwater
Florida, 33762-4800 USA
Booth 59
Phone:
Email:
Website:
+1 727 573 0088
[email protected]
www.mercurymed.com
Mindray
Contact:
Address:
Booth 18
Bill Nan
19 Harker Street
Burwood, VIC 3125
Phone:
Email:
Website:
1800 793 011
[email protected]
www.mindray.com
Mobito
Contact:
Address:
Booth 7
Dr Billy Drew and Tony Singh
PO BOX 1089 Hamilton, NSW 2303
Phone:
Email:
Website:
Website
Molnlycke Healthcare
Contact:
Address:
Glen Stubbings
Suite1.01, 10 Tilley Lane
Frenchs Forest, NSW 2086
Contact:
Address:
+61 4 31 640 464
[email protected]
www.mobito.com.au
www.apspad.com.au
Booth 14
Phone:
Email:
Website:
MSD
Booth 4
Maquet Australia Pty Ltd
Contact:
Address:
Contact:
Address:
Booth 19
+61 2 8977 2118
[email protected]
www.molnlycke.com.au
Booth 30
Tania Kunda
Merck Sharp & Dohme (Australia) Pty
Limited, Level 1 - Building A
26 Talavera Road
Macquarie Park, NSW 2113
Phone:
Email:
Website:
+61 2 8988 8000
[email protected]
www.msd-australia.com.au
Today’s MSD is a global healthcare leader working to help the world be well. MSD is a tradename of Merck & Co., Inc.,
with headquarters in Whitehouse Station, N.J., U.S.A. Through our prescription medicines, vaccines, biologic therapies,
and consumer care and animal health products, we work with customers and operate in more than 140 countries to
deliver innovative health solutions. We also demonstrate our commitment to increasing access to healthcare through
far-reaching policies, programs and partnerships. For more information, visit www.msd-australia.com.au.
Mundipharma Pty Ltd
Contact:
Address:
Medical Information Line
GPO Box 5214
Sydney NSW 2001
Booth 42
Phone:
Email:
Website:
1800 188 009
[email protected]
www.mundipharma.com.au
Mundipharma provides healthcare that enables Australians to live well and age well. We improve patients’ lives
in meaningful ways by providing effective therapies along with educational tools that support their proper use.
Mundipharma Australia is a member of a global network of independent associated companies which are engaged in
research, development, production and marketing of prescription medicines and healthcare products in our fields of
expertise across areas such as pain, oncology, respiratory disease, rheumatoid arthritis and antisepsis.
National Blood Authority
Contact:
Address:
Locked Bag 8430
Canberra, ACT 2601
Booth 70
Phone:
Email:
Website:
Perpetual Private
Contact:
Address:
Michelle Gianferrari
Level 12, 123 Pitt Street
Sydney, NSW 2000
+61 2 6151 5000
[email protected]
www.blood.gov.au
Booth 15
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 2 9229 3532
+61 4 21 446 513
[email protected]
www.perpetual.com.au/medicalspecialists
59
RE
NS
KE
R
CH
IE
F
Phone:
Email:
Website:
+61 2 9850 3333
[email protected]
www.pfizer.com.au
Simon Lloyd
PO Box 120 Lara, VIC 3212
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 3 5284 0220
ST
LL IPS
+61 4 17 P
824
HI920
[email protected]
www.rappaustralia.com.au
Rem Systems Pty Ltd
Phone:
Email:
Website:
1800 737 222
[email protected]
www.remsystems.com.au
GEORGE
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
Booth 40
ST
Nina Le-Lievre
Building A, Level 4, 5 Talavera Rd
Macquarie Park, NSW 2113
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
+61 4 12 982 561
[email protected]
www.terumo.com
HENLEY BEACH RD
NORTH TCE
GLO
VER
T
H INDLEY ST
KING WILLIAM ST
Booth 34
ON
+61 2 8281 5555
+61 4 59 029 502
[email protected]
www.verathon.com
GD
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
RUNDLE MALL
C
+61 3 9686 0111
+61 4 59 999 797
[email protected]
www.viforpharma.com
JA
ME
S
Phone:
Mobile:
Email:
Website:
SIR
LD
D ONA
MAN
BR AD
FLINDERS ST
T ORIA
VIC
60
Amanda Davis
Level 8, 80 Dorcas Street
Southbank, VIC 3006
S QUA E
R
Contact:
Address:
Booth 54 & 56
ST
PULT ENEY ST
Vifor Pharma
RUN DLE
GREN FELL ST
ON
Parisa Hesami
Level 13, 31 Market Street
Sydney, NSW 2000
Lake
Booth 78
Verathon Medical
Contact:
Address:
Tor
re
ns
1300 360 226
+61 4 00 370 631
[email protected]
www.teleflexmedical.com.au
Termo Australia Pty Ltd
Contact:
Address:
Bonython Park
KIN TORE AVE
Tim Shao
L4, Bldg B, 201 Coward Street
Mascot, NSW 2020
NE
UR
O
LB
S
ME
NIS
N
I
F
B UND
ST
Booth 51
Teleflex
Contact:
Address:
Palmer
Gardens
Brougham
Gardens
KAURNA
MO NTEFIORE RD
Karen George
Unit 11, 112-118 Talavera Road
Macquarie Park, NSW 2113
D
WA R
DRIVE
Contact:
Address:
S
Booth 57
S
GWAY
T RA N
TCE
MA
Contact:
Address:
ST
ST
M
RAPP Australia
RD
WARD
ST
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+61 3 8199 9000
[email protected]
www.prioritylife.com
ST
ST
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ARCH
ING
RN
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Phone:
Email:
Website:
A
BARN
ST
Bradley Gecelter
5c 28-30 Jackson Street
Toorak, VIC 3142
WALKING MAP
ST
Contact:
Address:
Booth 55
TH
S WOR
MO LE
Telephone: +61 8 8212 4099
Facsimilie: +61S8T8212 5101
YNTEwww.adelaidecc.com.au
TWeb:
TCE
Priority Life
Wellington
Square
VRE
LEFE
1800 251 400
[email protected]
ST
www.philips.com.au/healthcare
ADAM
ST
NORTH
ADELAIDE
V
North
Terrace, Adelaide, South Australia
GO
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Phone:
Email:
Website:
T the
The Adelaide Convention Centre (ACC), venueSfor
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ON
New Zealand College
BUXT of Anaesthetists and Faculty of Pain
HILL
MILLS
65 Epping Road
North Ryde, NSW 2113
T CE
Contact:
Address:
Booth 23
LL
ERS
CHILD
RT
ST
COTT
K
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At Pfizer, we apply science and our global resources to improve health and well-being at every stage of life. We strive
to set the standard for quality, safety and value in the discovery, development and manufacturing of medicines. Our
diversified global health care portfolio includes human biologic and small molecule medicines and vaccines, as well as
many of the world’s best-known consumer products. For more than 150 years, Pfizer has worked to make a difference for
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all who rely on us. To learn more, please visit us at www.pfizer.com.au
Phillips
NO
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Medicine, is a newly developed purpose built centre and
The meeting city, Adelaide, the capital of South
located in the heart of the city. The multi-award winning TC
Australia, is a cosmopolitan city renowned for
its
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centre holds a global reputation for excellence and is
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ST
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convention centre facilities.
ER
JEFF
Ruth Dyson
38-42 Wharf Road
West Ryde, NSW 2114
NORTHC
Booth 43
AI
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TC
NE
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Contact:
Address:
RO
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THE Adelaide Convention Centre (ACC)
ST
Pfizer
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FITZROY
RD
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HEALTHCARE INDUSTRY EXHIBITOR PROFILES (CONTINUED)
RD
61
MEETING INFORMATION
USEFUL CONTACTS
Emergency number (Ambulance/ Fire/ Police) T: 000
Registration and information desk T: +61 8 8210 6615
Adelaide airport T: +61 8 8308 9211
Flight information
https://www.adelaideairport.com.au/air-travel/flights-and-airlines
REGISTRATION DESK
The registration desk is located in foyer L of the Adelaide
Convention Centre and can be contacted on
+61 8 8210 6615 during opening hours. The desks will be open
at the following times:
Friday May 1, 2015
Saturday May 2, 2015
ACCOMMODATION
Sunday May 3, 2015
InterContinental Hotel Adelaide
Monday May 4, 2015
North terrace, Adelaide Tuesday May 5, 2015
T: +61 8 8238 2400
The Playford Adelaide
120 North Terrace, Adelaide
T: +61 8 8213 8888
Stamford Plaza Adelaide
150 North Terrace, Adelaide
T: +61 8 8461 1111
Crowne Plaza
16 Hindmarsh Square, Adelaide
T: +61 8 8206 8888
Hilton Adelaide
233 Victoria Square, Adelaide
T: +61 8 8217 2000
Oaks Embassy Adelaide
96 North Terrace, Adelaide
T: +61 8 8124 9900
Oaks Horizons Adelaide
104 North Terrace, Adelaide
T: +61 8 8210 8000
MEETING VENUE
Adelaide Convention Centre
North Terrace, Adelaide
T: +61 8 8212 4099
F: +61 8 8212 5101
W: www.adelaidecc.com.au
ANZCA REGISTRATION SECRETARIAT
WaldronSmith Management
119 Buckhurst Street
South Melbourne VIC 3205
T: +61 3 9645 6311
F: +61 3 9645 6322
E: [email protected]
ANZCA ASM 2015 SECRETARIAT
CPD PROGRAM
5pm – 7pm
7am – 5.30pm
7am – 5pm
7am – 5pm
8am – 3.30pm
ANZCA members will be automatically have their attendance
accredited to their CPD portfolio following the ASM, in June,
2015. Non ANZCA CPD participants please see the registration
desk to request an electronic certificate of attendance.
CATERING
All catering breaks and lunches on Saturday, Sunday, Monday
and Tuesday will be served amongst the HCI exhibition, in the
exhibition area, hall H.
SPECIAL DIETARY REQUIREMENTS
INFORMATION DESK
The ANZCA and FPM desk is located in foyer M. Please direct
any questions relating to the College Ceremony to College staff.
The desk will be open at the following times.
Saturday May 2, 2015
Sunday May 3, 2015
Monday May 4, 2015
Tuesday May 5, 2015
ePOSTER SESSIONS
8am – 5pm
8am – 5pm
8am – 5pm
8am – 3.30pm
ANZCA LOUNGE
For delegate convenience, ANZCA and FPM staff will be
available at the ANZCA lounge to assist with any College related
questions.
Name Badge
All participants will receive a name badge upon registration.
Name badges are required at all times for identification
purposes and admission to meeting sessions, HCI exhibition
and catering breaks. Admission to workshops, SGDs, breakfast
and lunch sessions and social functions will be by tickets. If you
misplace your name badge, please approach the registration
desk to obtain a replacement.
TICKETING
Delegates who are unable to attend their workshops, SGD
sessions, breakfast and lunch sessions and social functions can
return their ticket to the registration desk so another delegate
may attend. Please note that refunds will not be available. This
is a service to facilitate maximum attendance at all sessions
and to assist delegates who may have missed out on the
opportunity to attend. For available tickets, please approach the
registration desk frequently for updates.
If you have advised the meeting secretariat of special dietary
requirements, please speak to a member of the Adelaide
Convention Centre staff at tea and lunch breaks, or at any of
the evening functions that you may be attending. Catering staff
have a full list of delegates with special dietary requirements.
WIFI
Complimentary wireless internet is available for meeting
delegates. To log in please enter the following information:
SSID: ANZCAASM
Password: ASM2015
DUPLICATION / RECORDING
Photography, audiotaping, video recording, digital taping
or any other form of duplication is strictly prohibited in the
sessions and ePoster areas.
MOBILE PHONES
Delegates are requested to use mobile phones with
consideration for others. Please be sure to switch off during
all sessions.
SMOKING POLICY
The South Australian Government imposes a strict no
smoking policy in venues, restaurants, bars and shopping
centres in Adelaide. The Adelaide Convention Centre is a
smoke-free facility. No indoor smoking areas are provided.
PERSONAL PROPERTY
SPEAKER SUPPORT CENTRE
The Speaker Support Centre will be available for ASM
presenters whilst on site at the Adelaide Convention Centre.
Presenters are required to check into Speaker Support to
upload their presentation no later than 90 minutes prior to the
commencement of their session. At this time it will be possible
to make amendments to presentations and confirm media files
and images.
The Speaker Support Centre will be located in Riverbank Room
1 (R1) on the lower level of the Adelaide Convention Centre
and will be open at the following times:
Friday May 1, 2015
Saturday May 2, 2015
Sunday May 3, 2015
Monday May 4, 2015
Tuesday May 5, 2015
ePosters are displayed in the HCI exhibition area (hall H), and
in foyer spaces throughout the Adelaide Convention Centre
from Saturday - Tuesday. Please note that all ePoster sessions
will be moderated and session times can be found on pages
26 and 27 of this handbook.
3 – 6pm
7am – 5.30pm
7am – 5.30pm
7am – 5.30pm
7am – 3pm
Please take good care of your personal belongings. Do not
leave them unattended. The organisers and the meeting
secretariat will not be responsible for any loss or damage to
your personal properties.
DISCLAIMER
ANZCA Annual Scientific Meeting 2015 including the
Regional Organising Committee and the ASM Secretariat,
and all suppliers to the meeting and their servants, agents,
contractors and consultants, will not accept liability for the
damages of any nature sustained by participants or their
accompanying persons or loss or damage to their personal
property as a result of the ANZCA ASM 2015 or related
events. All details contained in this handbook are correct at
the time of printing.
DISCLOSURE
The scientific committee is committed to providing an
unbiased, balanced and objective educational and scientific
program.
INTENTION TO PHOTOGRAPH
Please be advised that photographs may be taken and
reproduced by the event organisers during the meeting.
630 St Kilda Road
Melbourne VIC 3004
T: +61 3 9510 6229
F: +61 3 9510 6786
E: [email protected]
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GENERAL INFORMATION
Public transport and Airport to city shuttle services
Climate
JetBus Airport Service
Adelaide Metro offers a convenient JetBus service linking
Adelaide Airport to Glenelg, West Beach and the City for the
price of a regular fare.
The average temperature range in May is 20˚C.
Taxis
The Adelaide Airport is only eight kilometres from the centre of
the city, a 15 minute drive. The average taxi fare from the city
centre to the airport is around $AUD20.
Adelaide Independent taxi: 132211
Yellow Cab company taxi:
132227
Adelaide Suburban taxi:
131008
Please note that no official arrangements have been made
for child care during the meeting. Please check with the hotel
you are staying at to seek further assistance with arranging
babysitting services during your stay.
Public transport
Adelaide is well-serviced by trains, trams and buses. If you’re in
town for a holiday, convention or business, a good option is the
Adelaide Metro Visitor Pass. The pass includes unlimited travel
for three consecutive days as well as a visitor pack with maps and
travel guides. If you’re staying longer, no problems - the Visitor
Pass can be recharged with normal Metrocard fares to help you
get to where you want to go.
Meeting sessions: Smart casual
Welcome reception: Smart casual
HCI reception: Smart casual
College ceremony and reception:
Stage party:
Black tie and College/Faculty gown or academic dress
Guests’ dress: Formal/Lounge Suit
College/Faculty gown or academic dress is optional
Gala dinner: Black tie or lounge suit
Free travel
You can travel around the Adelaide city centre for FREE when
you hop on board the tram between North Terrace and South
Terrace, or the 99C bus.
The Adelaide Connector
This bus service is a convenient link between the major facilities
within North Adelaide and Adelaide city centre. Facilities such as
universities, schools, community services and shopping precincts
are now linked and accessible via the Adelaide Connector free
bus service. The service operates seven days a week (except
public holidays). Mondays to Thursdays it operates from 8am to
6pm, on Fridays from 8am to 9.30pm, on Saturdays and Sundays
from 10am to 5pm. For more information, see the Adelaide City
Council website.
Parking
The ACC operates two convenient on-site car parks located
directly under the Centre.
Riverbank car park- Accessible from King William Road and
Morphett Road via Festival Drive
North Terrace car park - Accessible from North Terrace
Early bird - $13/day
(Enter between 5.30–9.30am; exit between 2.30-6.30pm)
Casual rates - 0-1hr $5, 1-2hrs $9, 2-3hrs $13, 3-4hrs $15. An
additional $1 will be charged for each hour to a maximum of
$26/24hours.
Lost ticket $26.
CHILD CARE
Dress
INFORMATION FOR INTERNATIONAL DELEGATES
LANGUAGE
English is the official language of the meeting.
CUSTOMS
For information visit www.customs.gov.au
THE TOURIST REFUND SCHEME (TRS)
International travellers can claim a refund of the Goods and
Services Tax (GST) paid on goods bought in Australia.
For more information visit www.customs.gov.au
CURRENCY
The currency of Australia is the Australian dollar.
ELECTRICITY
Australian electricity supply is 240V, 50Hz. The connection for
appliances is a flat 3-pin plug.
Website :
asm.anzca.edu.au
Email : [email protected]
: @ANZCA#ASM16NZ
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asm.anzca.edu.au