Program Handbook
You’ve arrived in Auckland!
WineriesNatural beauty
Magnificent coastline
Big city
style Volcanoes
Major sponsors:
City of sails
ContentsVirtual ASM 1Welcome from the President and the Dean 2Welcome from Convenor and Scientific Convenors 2ASM Regional Organising Committee 2Venues, accommodation and restaurants map 4ASM floorplans 5Keynote speakers 8College Ceremony Orator 9Industry supported speakers 10Closing session speaker 11Workshops and small group discussions program 14Scientific program 16CPD program 23Moderated ePosters 24ePosters 26Workshops 30Small group discussions 36Invited speakers 38 Workshop and small group discussion facilitators 39Prizes 40ANZCA and FPM Annual General Meetings 42Business meetings 43Meet the CEO 43Healthcare industry sponsors and exhibitors 44Social program 53Unique Auckland experiences 54Things to do in Auckland 56World-class dining 57Meeting information 58General information 60ANZCA ASM 2017 61
Virtual ASM
The Virtual ASM will allow you to:• View the scientific
and social program.• View abstracts.• View ePosters.• Listen to webcasts of each
presentation at the ASM.
• Take notes, save them against a presentation in order to log on and print later.
• Send questions to the chair of a session during a presentation.
• Participate in live polls.• Create your own
personalised meeting schedule.
Each presentation will be captured and uploaded for you to view within 24 hours!Did you miss that session everyone is talking about? Log on to the Virtual ASM and see the slides while listening to the presentation.
By logging in to the Virtual ASM on your smart phone, tablet or laptop, you can view the up-to-date program.
The Virtual ASM has many great features that you can access from your laptop, tablet or smart phone. We strongly encourage all delegates to bookmark the webpage
asm.anzca.edu.au/virtual-asm/log-inWi-FiComplimentary wireless internet is available for the meeting delegates.
To log on please enter the following information:
SSID: ANZCA_ASM
Password: Auckland2016
Log in If you are already a member, log in with your email and password via asm.anzca.edu.au/virtual-asm/log-in
Password If you have an account but need to set up a password or you have forgotten your password please select
and follow the prompts.
Set up a new account If you don’t have an account and want to set up one now to access the Virtual ASM please select
and follow the prompts.
How to bookmark the Virtual ASM tile You can add the Virtual ASM “tile” or icon on to your mobile and/or tablet for ease of access.
1. Tap the bookmark icon When you’re on
asm.anzca.edu.au/virtual-asm, just tap on the bookmark icon:
Android iPhone
2. Tap on the “Add to home screen” When the bookmark options
appear, tap on “Add to home screen”.
Android iPhone
3. Set the shortcut name Set the shortcut name as “ANZCA
ASM 2016” and tap on the “Add” button.
4. See the shortcut appear You’ll then see a shortcut appear
on your phone’s and tablet’s home screen. Tap on this icon at any time to open your saved page on our mobile-friendly website.
User guide
CREATE PASSWORD
REGISTER
: @ANZCA #ASM16NZ
Join the conversation
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Dr Michal Kluger ConvenorDr Mark Chaddock Deputy Convenor/TreasurerDr Matt Taylor Scientific Co-ConvenorAssociate Professor Tim Short Scientific Co-ConvenorDr Jim Olson FPM ASM Scientific ConvenorDr Jane Thomas FPM Refresher Course Day Scientific ConvenorDr Kieran Davis FPM Scientific Co-ConvenorDr Navdeep Sidhu New Fellows Conference Co-ConvenorDr Chao-Yuan Chen New Fellows Conference Co-ConvenorDr Marty Minehan Social Co-ConvenorDr Michele Atkins Social Co-ConvenorDr Tim Hall Workshop and SGD Co-ConvenorDr Vincent Fong Workshop and SGD Co-ConvenorDr Rachelle Lumsden Healthcare Industry Liaison ConvenorDr Jonathan Casement Intensive Care Medicine ConvenorDr Vanessa Beavis ANZCA CouncillorDr Cath Purdy Social Media RepresentativeDr Nicole Phillips Director of Professional Affairs ASMDr Michael Vagg FPM ASM Officer
ASM Regional Organising Committee
From left: Dr Michal Kluger, Convenor, Dr Matt Taylor Scientific Co-Convenor, Associate Professor Tim Short Scientific Co-Convenor, Dr Jim Olson FPM ASM Scientific Convenor.
Hold on! You’re about to go “Over the edge!”
Tena koutou, Tena koutou, Tena koutou katoa and welcome to Auckland, home of the 2016 ANZCA Annual Scientific Meeting and FPM Refresher Course Day.
Our team has endeavoured to do things differently – we hope you like it! The scientific program will take delegates far from traditional themes, while the social program has been created to showcase our amazing city and outstanding harbour. Delegates will have the opportunity to not only listen to presentations, but importantly to also actively contribute using the virtual ASM app, as well as other social media outlets. With speakers from around the world, a scientific program that would be the envy of any international meeting and a healthcare industry that continues to strongly support educational
activities, our ASM promises to give our delegates a wonderful, typically “kiwi” experience.
So plan your program, organise your social gatherings and get ready for our spectacular Great Gatsby dinner.
Kia ora mai.
Welcome to the ANZCA ASM in Auckland
Dr Genevieve Goulding ANZCA President
Professor Ted Shipton FPM Dean
So we invite you to move “Closer to the edge”, and experience the 2016 ANZCA ASM. The innovative scientific program explores emerging solutions for tomorrow’s problems – all in the heart of the beautiful city of Auckland, the “city of sails.” Joining you at the edge are outstanding speakers from all over the world. We are grateful to the convenors, their organising committees, and the event management team who have worked tirelessly to cultivate such a stimulative and informative program.
A great social program has been laid on as well, to allow you to explore Auckland’s
stunning natural beauty and magnificent coastline. No visit would be complete without immersing yourself in the culture, traditions and activities of New Zealand’s indigenous Maori people.
We remain indebted to all our speakers (both inter- national and local) for their contributions, and for the exceptional support received from the healthcare industry.
So welcome to Auckland and to Aotearoa, the land of the long white cloud.
Kia ora mai.
New Zealand lies at the edge of both the Australian and Pacific tectonic plates. Towards the northeast of New Zealand, and beneath the North Island, the Pacific Plate is moving towards, and being subducted below the Australian Plate. Yet all change happens at the EDGE.
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Venues, accommodation and restaurants map
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Venues
1 Aotea Centre 50 Mayoral Drive, Auckland
2 Auckland Town Hall Queen Street, Auckland
3 Skycity Convention Centre 88 Federal Street, Auckland
Accommodation
4 Crowne Plaza Auckland 128 Albert Street, Auckland
5 Skycity Grand Hotel Auckland 90 Federal Street, Auckland
6 Skycity Hotel Auckland Corner Federal and Victoria Streets, Auckland
7 Rydges Auckland 59 Federal Street, corner of Kingston Street, Central City, Auckland
8 Heritage Auckland 35 Hobson Street, Auckland
9 CityLife Auckland 171 Queen Street, Auckland
10 Langham Hotel Auckland 83 Symonds Street, Auckland
11 Pullman Auckland Hotel Corner Princes Street and Waterloo Quadrant, Auckland
12 Sofitel Auckland Viaduct Harbour 21 Viaduct Harbour Avenue, Auckland
Restaurants
13 Clooney 33 Sale Street, Auckland
14 French Café 210 Symonds Street, Eden Terrace
15 Merediths 365 Dominion Road, Mount Eden
16 Sidart Three Lamps Plaza, Level 1/283 Ponsonby Road, Ponsonby
17 The Sugar Club Level 53, Sky Tower Corner of Federal and Victoria Streets, Auckland
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Level 4 Level 5
ASM floorplans Skycity Convention Centre
Lifts – SKYCITY Grand Hotel
Lifts – SKYCITY Convention Centre
Escalators
Business Suite 1Business Suite 2
ParnellRoom
EpsomRoom 1
EpsomRoom 2
EpsomRoom 3
Milford Room
AucklandRoom 1
AucklandRoom 2
AucklandRoom 3
AucklandRoom 4
Auckland Foyer
2A
1A
4A
4B
3A
3B
1B
2B
Lifts – SKYCITY Grand Hotel
Lifts – SKYCITY Convention Centre
Escalators
CanterburyRoom
ExecutiveBoard Room
MarlboroughRoom 2
MarlboroughRoom 1
MarlboroughRoom 3
CoromandelRoom
New ZealandRoom 2
New ZealandRoom 1
New ZealandRoom 3
New ZealandRoom 4
New Zealand Foyer
New Zealand Promenade
New Zealand Promenade
2A
1A
4A
4B3A
3B
1B
2B
Unless otherwise stated all workshops and small group discussions will be held at Skycity Convention Centre, Auckland.
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Aotea Centre
ASM floorplans Aotea Centre
Registration desk Owens foyer, level 2
Information desk Owens foyer, level 2
ANZCA lounge BNZ foyer, booth 66 and 67, level 3
Plenary sessions ASB theatre
Concurrent sessions ASB theatre Upper NZI Lower NZI Limelight
Healthcare industry exhibition BNZ foyer, level 3 and Air New Zealand foyer, level 5
Speaker Support Centre Goodman Fielder room
ePosters BNZ foyer, level 3 and Air New Zealand foyer, level 5
Breakfast and Lunchtime Sessions Lower NZI, Upper NZI
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COUNCIL CHAMBERS
ASM floorplans Auckland Town Hall
Concurrent sessions Great Hall
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Keynote speakers
Professor Carol Peden ANZCA ASM Visitor
Professor Carol Peden has recently become executive director of the Center for Health System Innovation, and Professor of Anesthesiology, at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. Previously Carol was Associate Medical Director for Clinical Quality for NHS England, and Consultant in Anaesthesia and Intensive Care at the Royal United Hospitals, Bath, UK. With a masters degree in public health from Harvard University she has led quality improvement projects nationally and internationally such as the Enhanced Perioperative Care for High Risk Surgical Patient (EPOCH) study.
Carol is passionate about improving outcomes from emergency surgery and is a board member of the UK National Emergency Laparotomy Audit (NELA). Carol was the 2013-14 Macintosh Professor of the Royal College of Anaesthetists UK, and was awarded the Humphry Davy Medal in 2013.
In her spare time (never) Carol is a keen gym goer and loves driving fast cars.
Saturday April 30, 3.30-5pm Practical tools to diagnose how safe your care is – structured mortality reviews and global triggers
Sunday May 1, 8.30-9.15am Accelerating improvement for high risk surgical patients; quality, safety and system change
Tuesday May 3, 1.30-1.50pm Lessons from UK mortality review
Wednesday May 4, 4.10-4.30pmClosing debate – What my country has contributed to anaesthesia and pain medicine
Dr Cynthia Wong ANZCA NZ Visitor
Dr Cynthia Wong is a professor of anaesthesia at the Northwestern University Fienberg School of Medicine in Chicago, US. She is the section chief for obstetric anaesthesia and director of the Obstetric Anesthesiology Fellowship Program at Northwestern University.
Cynthia is section editor for obstetric anaesthesia for Anesthesia & Analgesia and is on the editorial boards of the International Journal of Obstetric Anesthesia and the British Journal of Anaesthesia.
She has edited several major textbooks, including Chestnut’s Obstetric Anesthesia, Principles and Practice, the premier textbook of obstetric anaesthesia.
Her research interests revolve around labour analgesia and its effects on the progress of labour and foetal status, epidural labour analgesia, as well as anaesthesia for caesarean delivery and post-operative analgesia.
Saturday April 30, 10.30-noonObstetric epidural masterclass
Sunday May 1, 1.30-2pm Emerging pharmacologic therapy for post partum haemorrhage (PPH)
Monday May 2, 8.30-9.15am Maternal mortality – Over the edge
Dr Steven Cohen FPM NZ Visitor
Dr Steven Cohen graduated from the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, completed an anesthesiology residency at Columbia University, and a pain management fellowship at Massachusetts General Hospital.
He is professor of anesthesiology and critical care medicine, and physical medicine and rehabilitation at both the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences.
His major contributions include the development of a new FDA approved technique for treating sacroiliac joint pain and performing the first clinical studies evaluating the use of injectable biological agents to treat spinal pain.
His research has been featured in newspapers throughout the world, including the New York Times on multiple occasions.
He is a retired US Army Colonel and the director of pain research at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. He and his wife Karen have three children, aged nine to 13 years old.
Saturday April 30, 3.30-5pmPractical troubleshooting for SI joint pain workshop
Sunday May 1, 1.30-2pm Radiofrequency denervation for facet joint pain
Monday May 2, 9.15-10amMilitary pain medicine
Professor John FraserOrganising Committee Visitor
Professor John Fraser is a graduate of the University of Glasgow. He arrived in Australia in a second-hand kilt via Russia, Mongolia and China via the Trans-Siberian Railway.
He is an eminent intensivist at the Prince Charles Hospital, Brisbane, and the director of ICU at St Andrew’s War Memorial Hospital.
John is co-founder and chief medical officer of BiVACOR, a multinational company developing a total-artificial heart, and the medical director for the Innovative Cardiovascular Engineering Laboratory.
He is the proud father of five great children and is supported by the beautiful Katrina.
John was a professional actor playing a school child in the film Heavenly Pursuits with Tom Conti and Helen Mirren. John and Daniel Craig were also part of the first British theatre company that performed in the Moscow Art Theatre. Daniel became James Bond and John, well… didn’t.
Sunday May 1, 4.30-5pm Bionic hearts and lungs – is it prime time?
Tuesday May 3, 8.30-9amBionic hearts and lungs? Closer than you think
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Professor Tony DickensonFPM ASM Visitor
Professor Anthony (Tony) Dickenson is professor of neuropharmacology at University College, London, UK.
He gained his PhD at the National Institute for Medical Research, London, and has held posts in Paris, California and Sweden.
His research interests are pharmacology of the brain, including the mechanisms of pain and how pain can be controlled in both normal and pathophysiological conditions.
Tony is an honorary member of the British Pain Society, was a member of the Council of the International Association for the Study of Pain for six years and is section editor for the journal Pain.
Tony has given plenary lectures at numerous major international and national meetings all over the world.
He claims his tennis game is amazing; no science can back this up.
Sunday May 1, 9.15-10am Novel analgesics/Future challenges
Professor Matthew ChanLennard Travers Professorship Visitor
Professor Matthew Chan is a professor in the Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. Matthew’s main research interests are clinical trials, anaesthetic pharmacology, neuroanaesthesia and critical care, anaesthetic simulation, neurophysiologic monitoring and mechanism of postoperative pain.
Matthew is an editorial board member and review articles editor for the Journal of Neurosurgical Anesthesiology and a member of the associate editorial board of the British Journal of Anaesthesia. He is a member of the ANZCA Research Committee and an executive member of the ANZCA Clinical Trials Network.
He is a principal investigator of six research grants from national and international funding bodies.
Wednesday May 4, 10.30-11.15am Lennard Travers presentation: Genetics of chronic postsurgical pain
Olympian and marathon rowing champion Rob Hamill’s extraordinary achievements include winning the inaugural Atlantic Rowing Race, then managing two successful defences of the event; silver at the Rowing World Championships, Commonwealth gold and a world record on the indoor rowing machine. He directed a successful row across the Tasman Sea and is now putting together an expedition to the South Pole.
Rob was recently the narrator and protagonist of the award-
winning documentary Brother Number One (see the trailer at www.brothernumberone.co.nz), which recounts the story of his return to Cambodia to retrace the steps of his brother Kerry, tortured and murdered by the Khmer Rouge.
Rob’s account is a powerful and inspiring message on tenacity, hope, love and the last human freedom: The power to choose your attitude and how you respond to any given situation.
College Ceremony Orator
Rob Hamill
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Industry supported speakers
Dr Adam LawSponsored by Karl Stortz Dr Adam Law is professor of anesthesiology at the QEII Health Sciences Centre in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. Adam is co-director of the Canadian AIME Airway Course, and teaches in that course and the US-based Difficult Airway Course on a regular basis. He also chaired the Canadian Airway Focus Group, which published expanded and updated Canadian airway management guidelines in 2013.
When not at work, he enjoys time with his family, hiking, running, skiing and playing reasonably bad tennis.
Dr Anil PatelSponsored by Fisher & PaykelDr Anil Patel is chairman of the anaesthetic department at The Royal National Throat Nose and Ear Hospital and since 2005 has also worked at University College Hospital, London as an honorary senior lecturer.
He has the largest experience of anaesthetising adult airway patients (more than 5,000) in the UK and his airway interests include jet ventilation, emergency airway management, airway stenosis, phonosurgery, videolaryngoscopy, the role of flexible laryngeal mask airways in ENT procedures and difficult airway management for head and neck cancer patients. He has helped develop the AP Advance Video Laryngoscope and published more than 100 articles/abstracts and 22 book chapters.
Dr John Xavier PereiraSponsored by BNZDr John Xavier Pereira is a past Ronald Melzack Fellow of the McGill Pain Center and more recently was a Pfizer Canada scholar in persistent and neuropathic pain. He is a master teacher at the Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary and received teaching awards from the medical school classes of 2012, 2013 and 2014.
He represented western Canada on the committee of physicians who wrote the country’s national guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of fibromyalgia.
He enjoys travelling the world and has been everywhere from Rome to Easter Island. He is also a foodie and loves trying new recipes, especially those that involve east-west fusion.
Dr Pereira is speaking at the Refresher Course Day and the ASM.
World leaders in airway management, pain and transfusion medicine.
Dr Narasimhan “Sim” JagannathanSponsored by Mercury MedicalDr Sim Jagannathan is an associate professor, anesthesiology, at Northwestern University in Chicago, Illinois, US.
His clinical research has focused on airway device studies in children. He has also designed, conducted and measured several randomised trials in paediatric anaesthesia.
He runs the paediatric airway workshop for the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) annual meeting and he is on the faculty for the Society of Airway Management (SAM) Pediatric Airway Workshop.
He is an editor for the American Board of Anesthesiologist written exam and an oral board examiner for the American Board of Anesthesiologists.
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Dr Herbert SchöchlSponsored by CSL BehringDr Herbert Schöchl received his medical degree from the University of Innsbruck in 1984. He has undertaken several clinical posts, including staff anaesthesiologist in both cardiac and vascular surgery at the General Hospital Salzburg. He spent six years as the vice-director of the emergency medical service in Salzburg and was also responsible for the rescue helicopter service for the area of Salzburg.
Since 1998 he has been appointed to the AUVA Trauma Hospital in Salzburg. Additionally he has a research contract at the AUVA Trauma Research Center, the “Ludwig Boltzmann Institute of Experimental and Clinical Traumatology” in Vienna.
His primary interest of research focuses on diagnoses and treatment strategies of trauma induced coagulopathy. He developed haemostatic treatment algorithms based on visco-elastic test results.
He is the author of more than 70 publications and reviewer for major journals.
Dr Toby RichardsSponsored by Vifor PharmaDr Toby Richards is an academic professor at the University College London and practising vascular surgeon. He has a strong interest in Patient Blood Management (PBM), working on the UK Department of Health working group of NHS Blood and Transplant – the future of transfusion medicine. Endorsed by Sir Bruce Keogh, PBM is now an internationally recognised program of quality improvement adopted in the NHS in 2015 with Commissioning for Quality and Innovation (CQUIN) targets proposed for all NHS trusts.Professor Richards has contributed to numerous publications on perioperative anaemia management as well as broad reaching impact publications with the UK DOH circular on Patient Blood Management and British Society for Haematology guidelines.
Michelle has a PhD in biomedical materials engineering, is a world leader in nanotechnology and is a self-confessed adrenaline junkie. Her passion for both sports and science has enabled her to travel the world in the search for her next adventure or research project. With specialist knowledge in nanotechnology, Michelle has contributed to the development of cutting edge technologies. Secretly, however, Michelle has been working on advancing these developments to help her to achieve her childhood dream of becoming a real life superhero. Her recent move to academia from industry was a step towards her goal of inspiring females to push the boundaries in both science and sports, and to encourage environmentally sustainable living through engineering design. More recently, Dr Michelle Dickinson, who uses the popular twitter handle “Nanogirl” (@medickinson), has been named Science Communicator for 2014 by the New Zealand Association of Scientists.
Don’t miss this closing
session!
Nanotechnology and medicine
Dr Michelle Dickinson MEng, PhD, MNZM “Nanogirl” (@medickinson)
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Workshops Small group discussions (SGDs)8am W11A
Eye blocks New Zealand room 1B
W23A Process communication model: Key2Me New Zealand room 2A
8am8.30am W01A Anaphylaxis – responding safely Marlborough room 2
W02A Can’t intubate, can’t oxygenate (CICO) New Zealand room 1AW05A Regional anaesthesia for elbow and hand surgery Auckland room 1AW06A Regional anaesthesia for shoulder surgery Auckland room 1BW07A Regional anaesthesia for hip and knee surgery Auckland room 2AW08A Regional anaesthesia for foot and ankle surgery Auckland room 2BW09A Regional anaesthesia for neuraxial and truncal blocks Auckland room 3AW10A Ultrasound guided in-plane and out-of-plane needling skills Auckland room 3BW12A Flexible bronchoscopy New Zealand room 3BW13A Videolaryngoscopy Auckland room 4BW17A Supraclavicular subclavian central line insertion with in-plane
ultrasound guidance New Zealand room 4AW32A Embracing the edge! The ANZCA “roles in practice” and your department –
how can we best introduce the roles into departmental teaching programs? Epsom room 2
W38A The edge of discomfort – seeking secular help from POPE Coromandel roomW39A Experimental pain testing – how and what Canterbury room
W03A High fidelity cardiac arrest simulation workshop, Tamaki Simulation Centre, Auckland
W24A Practical hypnosis for the busy anaesthetist New Zealand room 3AW25A Managing adverse outcomes New Zealand room 2BW29A Audit and maintaining databases New Zealand room 4B
8.30am SGD01 Tricky airway scenarios Epsom room 1SGD05 Neuropraxia assessment and management
Epsom room 3SGD09 Oh no, it’s a percreta! Parnell roomSGD13 ERAS for orthopaedic surgery Marlborough room 1SGD17 Common paediatric problems and pitfalls
Marlborough room 3SGD21 Getting started in research Executive Boardroom
9am W04A ACLS workshop, ADHB Clinical Skills Centre at Auckland HospitalW15A Basic transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) simulator workshop, Supper room, Auckland Town Hall
W21A Airborne medical emergencies, AirNZ Training Centre, Auckland
W20A BMW Track day and roadside trauma workshop, Hampton Downs racetrack, Auckland
9am9.30am
10am 10am10.30am W11B
Eye blocks New Zealand room 1B
W01B Anaphylaxis – responding safely Marlborough room 2W02B Can’t intubate, can’t oxygenate (CICO) New Zealand room 1AW05B Regional anaesthesia for elbow and hand surgery Auckland room 1AW06B Regional anaesthesia for shoulder surgery Auckland room 1BW07B Regional anaesthesia for hip and knee surgery Auckland room 2AW08B Regional anaesthesia for foot and ankle surgery Auckland room 2BW09B Regional anaesthesia for neuraxial and truncal blocks Auckland room 3AW10B Ultrasound guided in-plane and out-of-plane needling skills Auckland room 3BW12B Flexible bronchoscopy New Zealand room 3BW14A Paediatric airway Auckland room 4AW27A From teapots to Toyotas: Principles of lean thinking Executive BoardroomW33A Introducing the ANZCA educators program Epsom room 2W34A ANZCA training program 101: Pearls of wisdom for new supervisors of training,
rotational supervisors, education officers and deputy education officers, Canterbury room
W40A CPD and me – reducing lifelong learning to ticks in boxes Coromandel roomW41A Pain and wellness Epsom room 1
10.30am SGD06 Sedation for endoscopy Epsom room 3SGD10 Obstetric epidural masterclass Parnell roomSGD14 Complex spine surgery – tips and pitfalls
Marlborough room 1SGD18 The ultimate pre-operative test for the high risk
patient? Cardio pulmonary exercise testing (CPET) for risk assessment and pre-operative planning Marlborough room 3
SGD22 The impaired anaesthetist Business suite 1
11am 11am
11.30am 11.30am
Noon Noon12.30pm College Ceremony Rehearsal New Zealand room 3A 12.30pm1pm W23B Process
communication model: Key2Me New Zealand room 2A
W03B High fidelity cardiac arrest simulation workshop, Tamaki Simulation Centre, Auckland
W04B ACLS workshop, ADHB Clinical Skills Centre at Auckland HospitalW15B Basic transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) simulator workshop, Supper room, Auckland Town Hall
W18A Anaesthesia and disaster response Epsom room 2
1pm1.30pm W02C Can’t intubate, can’t oxygenate (CICO) New Zealand room 1A
W05C Regional anaesthesia for elbow and hand surgery Auckland room 1AW06C Regional anaesthesia for shoulder surgery Auckland room 1BW07C Regional anaesthesia for hip and knee surgery Auckland room 2AW08C Regional anaesthesia for foot and ankle surgery Auckland room 2BW09C Regional anaesthesia for neuraxial and truncal blocks Auckland room 3AW10C Ultrasound guided in-plane and out-of-plane needling skills Auckland room 3BW13B Videolaryngoscopy Auckland room 4BW14B Paediatric airway Auckland room 4AW16A Advanced ventilation skills New Zealand room 3BW28A The unknown edge: Writing a business case for dummies Marlborough room 2W30A Using the ANZCA library for research New Zealand room 4BW42A Pain management in the pregnant patient Coromandel room
1.30pm SGD03 Burns anaesthesia Epsom room 1SGD07 New horizons in acute stroke management
– anaesthesia for “clot retrieval” Epsom room 3SGD11 Collapsed parturient Parnell roomSGD15 Statistics for dummies Marlborough room 1SGD19 ERAS for colorectal surgery Marlborough room 3SGD23 Ethical dilemmas Canterbury room
2pm W26A Mastering your risk New Zealand room 2B
2pm2.30pm
3pm W22A Paediatric anaesthetics near the edge and beyond New Zealand room 4A
3pm3.30pm W05D Regional anaesthesia for elbow and hand surgery Auckland room 1A
W06D Regional anaesthesia for shoulder surgery Auckland room 1BW07D Regional anaesthesia for hip and knee surgery Auckland room 2AW08D Regional anaesthesia for foot and ankle surgery Auckland room 2BW09D Regional anaesthesia for neuraxial and truncal blocks Auckland room 3AW10D Ultrasound guided in-plane and out-of-plane needling skills Auckland room 3BW16B Advanced ventilation skills New Zealand room 3BW31A Copyright and research New Zealand room 4BW43A Acute pain management in the patient on opioids Canterbury roomW44A Interventional pain – practical troubleshooting Coromandel room
3.30pm SGD04 Minimally invasive aortic valve anaesthetic management Epsom room 1
SGD08 The hypertensive woman in the delivery suite Epsom room 3
SGD12 The pregnant patient with a cardiac lesion Parnell room
SGD16 Practical tools to diagnose how safe your care is – structured mortality reviews and global triggers Marlborough room 1
SGD20 Bariatric surgery high risk patient Marlborough room 3
4pm 4pm
4.30pm 4.30pm
5pm 5pm6-7.30pm College Ceremony ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre7.30-11.30pm College Ceremony Reception Great Hall, Auckland Town Hall
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Workshops Small group discussions (SGDs)8am W11A
Eye blocks New Zealand room 1B
W23A Process communication model: Key2Me New Zealand room 2A
8am8.30am W01A Anaphylaxis – responding safely Marlborough room 2
W02A Can’t intubate, can’t oxygenate (CICO) New Zealand room 1AW05A Regional anaesthesia for elbow and hand surgery Auckland room 1AW06A Regional anaesthesia for shoulder surgery Auckland room 1BW07A Regional anaesthesia for hip and knee surgery Auckland room 2AW08A Regional anaesthesia for foot and ankle surgery Auckland room 2BW09A Regional anaesthesia for neuraxial and truncal blocks Auckland room 3AW10A Ultrasound guided in-plane and out-of-plane needling skills Auckland room 3BW12A Flexible bronchoscopy New Zealand room 3BW13A Videolaryngoscopy Auckland room 4BW17A Supraclavicular subclavian central line insertion with in-plane
ultrasound guidance New Zealand room 4AW32A Embracing the edge! The ANZCA “roles in practice” and your department –
how can we best introduce the roles into departmental teaching programs? Epsom room 2
W38A The edge of discomfort – seeking secular help from POPE Coromandel roomW39A Experimental pain testing – how and what Canterbury room
W03A High fidelity cardiac arrest simulation workshop, Tamaki Simulation Centre, Auckland
W24A Practical hypnosis for the busy anaesthetist New Zealand room 3AW25A Managing adverse outcomes New Zealand room 2BW29A Audit and maintaining databases New Zealand room 4B
8.30am SGD01 Tricky airway scenarios Epsom room 1SGD05 Neuropraxia assessment and management
Epsom room 3SGD09 Oh no, it’s a percreta! Parnell roomSGD13 ERAS for orthopaedic surgery Marlborough room 1SGD17 Common paediatric problems and pitfalls
Marlborough room 3SGD21 Getting started in research Executive Boardroom
9am W04A ACLS workshop, ADHB Clinical Skills Centre at Auckland HospitalW15A Basic transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) simulator workshop, Supper room, Auckland Town Hall
W21A Airborne medical emergencies, AirNZ Training Centre, Auckland
W20A BMW Track day and roadside trauma workshop, Hampton Downs racetrack, Auckland
9am9.30am
10am 10am10.30am W11B
Eye blocks New Zealand room 1B
W01B Anaphylaxis – responding safely Marlborough room 2W02B Can’t intubate, can’t oxygenate (CICO) New Zealand room 1AW05B Regional anaesthesia for elbow and hand surgery Auckland room 1AW06B Regional anaesthesia for shoulder surgery Auckland room 1BW07B Regional anaesthesia for hip and knee surgery Auckland room 2AW08B Regional anaesthesia for foot and ankle surgery Auckland room 2BW09B Regional anaesthesia for neuraxial and truncal blocks Auckland room 3AW10B Ultrasound guided in-plane and out-of-plane needling skills Auckland room 3BW12B Flexible bronchoscopy New Zealand room 3BW14A Paediatric airway Auckland room 4AW27A From teapots to Toyotas: Principles of lean thinking Executive BoardroomW33A Introducing the ANZCA educators program Epsom room 2W34A ANZCA training program 101: Pearls of wisdom for new supervisors of training,
rotational supervisors, education officers and deputy education officers, Canterbury room
W40A CPD and me – reducing lifelong learning to ticks in boxes Coromandel roomW41A Pain and wellness Epsom room 1
10.30am SGD06 Sedation for endoscopy Epsom room 3SGD10 Obstetric epidural masterclass Parnell roomSGD14 Complex spine surgery – tips and pitfalls
Marlborough room 1SGD18 The ultimate pre-operative test for the high risk
patient? Cardio pulmonary exercise testing (CPET) for risk assessment and pre-operative planning Marlborough room 3
SGD22 The impaired anaesthetist Business suite 1
11am 11am
11.30am 11.30am
Noon Noon12.30pm College Ceremony Rehearsal New Zealand room 3A 12.30pm1pm W23B Process
communication model: Key2Me New Zealand room 2A
W03B High fidelity cardiac arrest simulation workshop, Tamaki Simulation Centre, Auckland
W04B ACLS workshop, ADHB Clinical Skills Centre at Auckland HospitalW15B Basic transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) simulator workshop, Supper room, Auckland Town Hall
W18A Anaesthesia and disaster response Epsom room 2
1pm1.30pm W02C Can’t intubate, can’t oxygenate (CICO) New Zealand room 1A
W05C Regional anaesthesia for elbow and hand surgery Auckland room 1AW06C Regional anaesthesia for shoulder surgery Auckland room 1BW07C Regional anaesthesia for hip and knee surgery Auckland room 2AW08C Regional anaesthesia for foot and ankle surgery Auckland room 2BW09C Regional anaesthesia for neuraxial and truncal blocks Auckland room 3AW10C Ultrasound guided in-plane and out-of-plane needling skills Auckland room 3BW13B Videolaryngoscopy Auckland room 4BW14B Paediatric airway Auckland room 4AW16A Advanced ventilation skills New Zealand room 3BW28A The unknown edge: Writing a business case for dummies Marlborough room 2W30A Using the ANZCA library for research New Zealand room 4BW42A Pain management in the pregnant patient Coromandel room
1.30pm SGD03 Burns anaesthesia Epsom room 1SGD07 New horizons in acute stroke management
– anaesthesia for “clot retrieval” Epsom room 3SGD11 Collapsed parturient Parnell roomSGD15 Statistics for dummies Marlborough room 1SGD19 ERAS for colorectal surgery Marlborough room 3SGD23 Ethical dilemmas Canterbury room
2pm W26A Mastering your risk New Zealand room 2B
2pm2.30pm
3pm W22A Paediatric anaesthetics near the edge and beyond New Zealand room 4A
3pm3.30pm W05D Regional anaesthesia for elbow and hand surgery Auckland room 1A
W06D Regional anaesthesia for shoulder surgery Auckland room 1BW07D Regional anaesthesia for hip and knee surgery Auckland room 2AW08D Regional anaesthesia for foot and ankle surgery Auckland room 2BW09D Regional anaesthesia for neuraxial and truncal blocks Auckland room 3AW10D Ultrasound guided in-plane and out-of-plane needling skills Auckland room 3BW16B Advanced ventilation skills New Zealand room 3BW31A Copyright and research New Zealand room 4BW43A Acute pain management in the patient on opioids Canterbury roomW44A Interventional pain – practical troubleshooting Coromandel room
3.30pm SGD04 Minimally invasive aortic valve anaesthetic management Epsom room 1
SGD08 The hypertensive woman in the delivery suite Epsom room 3
SGD12 The pregnant patient with a cardiac lesion Parnell room
SGD16 Practical tools to diagnose how safe your care is – structured mortality reviews and global triggers Marlborough room 1
SGD20 Bariatric surgery high risk patient Marlborough room 3
4pm 4pm
4.30pm 4.30pm
5pm 5pm6-7.30pm College Ceremony ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre7.30-11.30pm College Ceremony Reception Great Hall, Auckland Town Hall
Sun
day
May
1
Tues
day
May
3
Wed
nesd
ay M
ay 4
Mon
day
May
2
Workshops10.30am W36A EMAC
instructors CPD debrief workshop, Limelight room 1, Aotea Centre
Noon
Workshops3.30pm W35B
Stepping back from the edge! Support for SoTs and their role in the ANZCA curriculum, Limelight room 1, Aotea Centre
5pm
Workshops
8.30am W19A Zoo anaesthesia, Auckland Zoo, Auckland
1pm
1.30pm W37A What would you tell a colleague who is considering retirement? Limelight room 1, Aotea Centre
3pm
Workshops
8.30am W01C Anaphylaxis - responding safely Limelight 1, Aotea Centre
10amSGDs10.30am SGD02
Airway badness... How I approach tricky patients using an evidence-based approach, Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
Noon
Workshops3.30pm W35A
Stepping back from the edge! Support for SoTs and their role in the ANZCA curriculum, Limelight room 1, Aotea Centre
5pm
Unless otherwise stated all workshops and small group discussions will be held at Skycity Convention Centre, Auckland.Correct at time of printing. Please visit asm.anzca.edu.au for updated information.
16
Scientific program
Sunday May 1, 2016
Highlights:• Everest explorer Professor
Hugh Montgomery on the genetics of survival.
• Olympian and former World Anti-Doping Agency Committee Chairman Professor David Gerrard CNZM OBE talks about drug misuse in sport.
• ANZCA Clinical Trials Network results – ATACAS, MUM size and Safety of Endoscopy Sedation.
8.15-8.30am Opening address and welcome ceremony ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
8.30-10am OPENING SESSION: ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreEllis Gillespie LectureChair: Dr Genevieve Goulding, ANZCA PresidentProfessor Carol Peden (ANZCA ASM Visitor) Accelerating improvement for high risk surgical patients: quality, safety and system change
Michael Cousins LectureChair: Professor Ted Shipton, FPM DeanProfessor Tony Dickenson (FPM ASM Visitor) Novel analgesics/Future challenges
10-10.30am Morning tea, healthcare industry exhibition
10.30am-noon CONCURRENT SESSION 1: ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreANZCA Clinical Trials NetworkBreaking trialsChair: Associate Professor Philip Peyton
CONCURRENT SESSION 2: Great Hall, Auckland Town HallGenetics – PharmacogenomicsChair: Dr Dean Bunbury
CONCURRENT SESSION 3: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentrePaediatric careChair: Dr Niall Wilton
FACULTY OF PAIN MEDICINE 1: Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentreIdeals and the lawChair: Dr Jane Thomas
SGD Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
The ATACAS trial tranexamic acid resultsProfessor Paul MylesThe MUM size study resultsProfessor David Story The safety of endoscopy sedation study resultsProfessor Kate Leslie
Born to die – genetics of survivalProfessor Hugh MontgomeryIntegrating genomics research into pragmatic clinical trials in anaesthesia and perioperative medicineDr Chris BainPersonalised medicine for anaesthetists: cardiovascular genomicsDr Patrick Gladding
Safe kids – anaesthesia and the GAS studyProfessor Andrew DavidsonNIRS Dr Justin SkownoPractical Propofol infusions in kids: targeted control or flying blind?Dr James Houghton
Being an expert witnessMs Kate Davenport Being a good pain physicianProfessor Ron Paterson Medico legal report writing Dr Newman Harris
SGD02: Airway badness... How I approach tricky patients using an evidence-based approach...
noon-1.30pm Lunch, healthcare industry exhibition, FPM Trainee Luncheon Limelight 2, Aotea Centre, LS01 sponsored lunchtime session Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea Centre
1.30-3pm CONCURRENT SESSION 4: ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreObstetric anaesthesia SIGCrisis care to normal careChair: Dr Jack Hill
CONCURRENT SESSION 5: Great Hall, Auckland Town HallExercise/sportsThe good, the bad, the mad and the flabChair: Dr Graham Morton
CONCURRENT SESSION 6: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreNeuroanaesthesia SIGThe edge of cerebral perfusion? Chair: Dr Doug Campbell
FACULTY OF PAIN MEDICINE 2: Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentreEvidence and best approaches Chair: Dr Marc Russo
Emerging pharmacologic therapy for post partum haemorrhage (PPH)Professor Cynthia WongEnhanced recovery after obstetric surgeryDr Matthew DrakeInnovations and advances in drug delivery in obstetric anaesthesiaProfessor Warwick Ngan Kee
Drug misuse in sport: lessons from Lance ArmstrongProfessor David GerrardAnaesthesia and the athleteDr Peter DzendrowskyjThe psychology of the MAMILMr Campbell Thompson Fat and fitDr Chris Hanna
The EXTEND-IA trial, early intervention for strokeProfessor Alan BarberInterventional neuroradiology for acute cerebrovascular accident (CVA)Dr Stefan BrewAnaesthesia for the acute strokeDr Nigel Robertson
Radiofrequency denervation for facet joint painDr Steven Cohen Implant registryAssociate Professor Brendan MooreNutraceuticalsDr John Pereira
3-3.30pm Afternoon tea, healthcare industry exhibition
3.30-5pm CONCURRENT SESSION 7: ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreBloodChair: Dr Kerry Gunn
CONCURRENT SESSION 8: Great Hall, Auckland Town HallOxygenThe perils of O2Chair: Associate Professor Simon Mitchell
CONCURRENT SESSION 9: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreCardiac Thoracic, Vascular and Perfusion (CTVP) SIGChallenging historical thinking – cardiacChair: Dr Cornelius Kruger
FACULTY OF PAIN MEDICINE 3: Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentrePain and cultureChair: Dr Michael Vagg
WORKSHOP Limelight 1, Aotea Centre
ROTEM guided transfusionDr Herbert SchöchlNew oral anticoagulants (NOACs) and reversalDr Laura YoungIron and perioperative blood managementProfessor Toby Richards
Adaption to hypoxiaProfessor Hugh MontgomeryBenefits and harms of oxygen during maintenance of anaesthesiaDr Dan WoodPermissive hypoxia during anaesthesiaDr Doug Campbell
ECMO – alternative indicators and pushing the boundariesDr Sara AllenEcho and the mitral valveDr David SidebothamBionic hearts and lungs – is it prime time?Professor John Fraser
Call it courageDr Leinani Aiono-Le Tagaloa Working with WhanauDr Hinemoa Elder60,000+ years and 12 papers: pain in aboriginal Australian peoplesDr Luke Arthur
W35A: Stepping back from the edge! Support for SOTs and their role in the ANZCA curriculum
5-6.30pm Healthcare Industry Reception
Correct at time of printing. Please visit asm.anzca.edu.au for updated information.
17
8.15-8.30am Opening address and welcome ceremony ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
8.30-10am OPENING SESSION: ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreEllis Gillespie LectureChair: Dr Genevieve Goulding, ANZCA PresidentProfessor Carol Peden (ANZCA ASM Visitor) Accelerating improvement for high risk surgical patients: quality, safety and system change
Michael Cousins LectureChair: Professor Ted Shipton, FPM DeanProfessor Tony Dickenson (FPM ASM Visitor) Novel analgesics/Future challenges
10-10.30am Morning tea, healthcare industry exhibition
10.30am-noon CONCURRENT SESSION 1: ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreANZCA Clinical Trials NetworkBreaking trialsChair: Associate Professor Philip Peyton
CONCURRENT SESSION 2: Great Hall, Auckland Town HallGenetics – PharmacogenomicsChair: Dr Dean Bunbury
CONCURRENT SESSION 3: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentrePaediatric careChair: Dr Niall Wilton
FACULTY OF PAIN MEDICINE 1: Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentreIdeals and the lawChair: Dr Jane Thomas
SGD Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
The ATACAS trial tranexamic acid resultsProfessor Paul MylesThe MUM size study resultsProfessor David Story The safety of endoscopy sedation study resultsProfessor Kate Leslie
Born to die – genetics of survivalProfessor Hugh MontgomeryIntegrating genomics research into pragmatic clinical trials in anaesthesia and perioperative medicineDr Chris BainPersonalised medicine for anaesthetists: cardiovascular genomicsDr Patrick Gladding
Safe kids – anaesthesia and the GAS studyProfessor Andrew DavidsonNIRS Dr Justin SkownoPractical Propofol infusions in kids: targeted control or flying blind?Dr James Houghton
Being an expert witnessMs Kate Davenport Being a good pain physicianProfessor Ron Paterson Medico legal report writing Dr Newman Harris
SGD02: Airway badness... How I approach tricky patients using an evidence-based approach...
noon-1.30pm Lunch, healthcare industry exhibition, FPM Trainee Luncheon Limelight 2, Aotea Centre, LS01 sponsored lunchtime session Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea Centre
1.30-3pm CONCURRENT SESSION 4: ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreObstetric anaesthesia SIGCrisis care to normal careChair: Dr Jack Hill
CONCURRENT SESSION 5: Great Hall, Auckland Town HallExercise/sportsThe good, the bad, the mad and the flabChair: Dr Graham Morton
CONCURRENT SESSION 6: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreNeuroanaesthesia SIGThe edge of cerebral perfusion? Chair: Dr Doug Campbell
FACULTY OF PAIN MEDICINE 2: Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentreEvidence and best approaches Chair: Dr Marc Russo
Emerging pharmacologic therapy for post partum haemorrhage (PPH)Professor Cynthia WongEnhanced recovery after obstetric surgeryDr Matthew DrakeInnovations and advances in drug delivery in obstetric anaesthesiaProfessor Warwick Ngan Kee
Drug misuse in sport: lessons from Lance ArmstrongProfessor David GerrardAnaesthesia and the athleteDr Peter DzendrowskyjThe psychology of the MAMILMr Campbell Thompson Fat and fitDr Chris Hanna
The EXTEND-IA trial, early intervention for strokeProfessor Alan BarberInterventional neuroradiology for acute cerebrovascular accident (CVA)Dr Stefan BrewAnaesthesia for the acute strokeDr Nigel Robertson
Radiofrequency denervation for facet joint painDr Steven Cohen Implant registryAssociate Professor Brendan MooreNutraceuticalsDr John Pereira
3-3.30pm Afternoon tea, healthcare industry exhibition
3.30-5pm CONCURRENT SESSION 7: ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreBloodChair: Dr Kerry Gunn
CONCURRENT SESSION 8: Great Hall, Auckland Town HallOxygenThe perils of O2Chair: Associate Professor Simon Mitchell
CONCURRENT SESSION 9: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreCardiac Thoracic, Vascular and Perfusion (CTVP) SIGChallenging historical thinking – cardiacChair: Dr Cornelius Kruger
FACULTY OF PAIN MEDICINE 3: Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentrePain and cultureChair: Dr Michael Vagg
WORKSHOP Limelight 1, Aotea Centre
ROTEM guided transfusionDr Herbert SchöchlNew oral anticoagulants (NOACs) and reversalDr Laura YoungIron and perioperative blood managementProfessor Toby Richards
Adaption to hypoxiaProfessor Hugh MontgomeryBenefits and harms of oxygen during maintenance of anaesthesiaDr Dan WoodPermissive hypoxia during anaesthesiaDr Doug Campbell
ECMO – alternative indicators and pushing the boundariesDr Sara AllenEcho and the mitral valveDr David SidebothamBionic hearts and lungs – is it prime time?Professor John Fraser
Call it courageDr Leinani Aiono-Le Tagaloa Working with WhanauDr Hinemoa Elder60,000+ years and 12 papers: pain in aboriginal Australian peoplesDr Luke Arthur
W35A: Stepping back from the edge! Support for SOTs and their role in the ANZCA curriculum
5-6.30pm Healthcare Industry Reception
18
Scientific program continued
Monday May 2, 2016
7-8.15am BS01 Sponsored breakfast session Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea Centre
8.30-10am Mary Burnell Lecture ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreChair: Dr Genevieve Goulding, ANZCA PresidentProfessor Cynthia Wong (ANZCA NZ Visitor) Maternal mortality – over the edgeDr Bridget Effeney – 2017 ASM Brisbane launch
FPM NZ Visitor’s LectureChair: Professor Ted Shipton, FPM DeanDr Steven Cohen (FPM NZ Visitor) Military pain medicine
10-10.30am Morning tea, healthcare industry exhibition10.30am-noon CONCURRENT SESSION 10: ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
Airway SIGTHRIVE: edging ahead in apnoeic ventilationChair: Dr Paul Baker
CONCURRENT SESSION 11: Great Hall, Auckland Town HallWelfare of Anaesthetists SIGWay too close to the edge?Chair: Dr Marion Andrew
CONCURRENT SESSION 12: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreDay Care Anaesthesia SIGDaystay in the geriatric patientChair: Dr Tomoko Hara
FACULTY OF PAIN MEDICINE 4: Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentreFPM Dean’s Prize and FPM Best Free Paper SessionChair: Professor Milton Cohen
WORKSHOP Limelight 1, Aotea Centre MODERATED ePOSTER SESSION: Regional anaesthesia Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
High flow humidified oxygen and the management of hypoxiaDr Anil PatelThe fluid mechanics of the airwayMr Matthew Payton
General problem and incidence in anaesthesiaDr Catherine Purdy“Who – me – an addict?”Dr Ruth MayallManaging substance use in anaesthetistsDr Nghi PhungMedical board’s perspective – reporting, monitoring, rehab and complianceAssociate Professor Richard Walsh
Improving the selection process: fitness and readinessDr Lisa ChapmanPost operative deliriumDr Chantal McNallyPerioperative management of geriatric patientsDr Shravani Gupta
DEANS’S PRIZE:Retrospective audit of IV ketamine infusions in chronic pain patientsDr Chui ChongEffectiveness and safety of lignocaine 5% patches in the treatment of neuropathic pain disordersDr Justin Ti Postoperative analgesic efficacy of continuous wound infusion of local anaesthetic compared to opioid patient controlled analgesia after laparotomy: a prospective studyDr Linda Trang BEST FREE PAPER:Reduction of chronic post-surgical pain with ketamine (ROCKet) pilot trial Associate Professor Philip PeytonCan perioperative factors differentiate patients who develop persistent pain after total knee arthroplasty?Dr David Rice Meta-analysis of the effectiveness of perioperative ketamine to reduce persistent postsurgical painAssociate Professor Philip Peyton
W36A: EMAC instructors CPD debrief workshop. An informal lunch for prospective and current EMAC instructors will follow the workshop. You do not need to have attended this workshop.
Refer to page 24
noon-1.30pm EMAC lunch Limelight 1, Aotea Centre, healthcare industry exhibition, ANZCA Trainee Luncheon Box Cafe and Bar, Aotea Centre FPM AGM Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea Centre, LS02 sponsored lunchtime session Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea Centre1.30-3pm CONCURRENT SESSION 13: ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
Airway SIGSimplifying complex airwaysChair: Dr Tish Stefanutto
CONCURRENT SESSION 14: Great Hall, Auckland Town HallMedical Education SIGTraits, technology and tutelageChair: Dr Kerryn Bunbury
CONCURRENT SESSION 15: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreAustralia and New Zealand Anaesthetic Allergy Group (ANZAAG)New solutions for anaphylaxisChair: Dr Peter Cooke
FACULTY OF PAIN MEDICINE 5: Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentrePsychology and painChair: Dr Newman Harris
MODERATED ePOSTER SESSION: Clinical anaesthesia Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
Human factors in airway managementDr Stuart MarshallDifficult airway management/Standard operating protocols Dr Paul BakerAdvanced fiberoptic airway techniquesProfessor Adam LawManagement of the complex difficult pediatric airway Dr Sim Jagannathan
Personality – how does it influence a teaching interaction?Dr Marion AndrewInternational developments in workplace based assessment – methods and technologiesDr Ian GrahamCoaching 101 with the struggling trainee/physician – a brief overviewDr Dawn Martin
ANZCA/ANZAAG anaphylaxis management guidelines 2nd version 2016Dr Helen KolawoleMulti-dimensional approach to anaesthetic reactionsProfessor Brian Broom Perioperative allergy: answers to your questionsDr Helen Crilly, Dr Penny Fitzharris
Pain and sleepMr Malcolm JohnsonHow expectations influence drug response and side effectsProfessor Keith Petrie Venturing beyond relaxation – mindfulness and psychological flexibilityMr Dieter Dvorak
Refer to page 25
3-3.30pm Afternoon tea, healthcare industry exhibition3.30-5pm CONCURRENT SESSION 16: ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
FluidsSearching for the haemodynamic edgeChair: Professor Paul Myles
CONCURRENT SESSION 17: Great Hall, Auckland Town HallACCUTE SIGAdversity starts with “A”: Africa, Antarctica and avalanchesChair: Dr Jamin Mulvey
CONCURRENT SESSION 18: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreMalignant hyperthermia (MH) and WebAIRSMH and crisis managementChair: Dr Neil Pollock
FACULTY OF PAIN MEDICINE 6: Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentreAcute Pain SIGHot off the pressChair: Dr David Jones
WORKSHOP Limelight 1, Aotea Centre MODERATED ePOSTER SESSION: Technology and Airway Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
Pro GDTDr Tuong PhanCon GDTProfessor Tomás CorcoranPerioperative endothelial dysfunctionAssociate Professor Bernhard Riedel
EbolaDr Jenny StedmonAnaesthesia and retrieval in AntarcticaDr Nick LerchEverest base camp avalancheDr Megan Walmsley
Genetics of malignant hyperthermiaProfessor Kathryn StowellThe changing face of malignant hyperthermia, a New Zealand perspectiveDr Terasa BulgerWebAIRS: strategies to analyse and manage anaesthetic crisesDr Martin Culwick
EBPM: launch of the new editionProfessor Stephan Schug Opioids: what are the real differencesDr Steve JonesOpioid free anaesthesiaDr Adrian Sultana
W35B: Stepping back from the edge! Support for SOTs and their role in the ANZCA curriculum
Refer to page 25
5-5.30pm ANZCA AGM ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
5.30-6pm AGM of New Zealand Fellows of ANZCA ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
5.30-7pm Anaesthesia and Pain Medicine Foundation Cocktail Reception Council Chamber, Auckland Town Hall
Highlights:• Launch of Acute Pain
Management: Scientific Evidence – fourth edition.
• “ THRIVE-ing on apnoeic ventilation – Is this a game-changer for the difficult airway?” with Dr Anil Patel.
• ACCUTE SIG session on “Adversity starts with A: Africa, Antarctica and avalanches”.
Correct at time of printing. Please visit asm.anzca.edu.au for updated information.
19
7-8.15am BS01 Sponsored breakfast session Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea Centre
8.30-10am Mary Burnell Lecture ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreChair: Dr Genevieve Goulding, ANZCA PresidentProfessor Cynthia Wong (ANZCA NZ Visitor) Maternal mortality – over the edgeDr Bridget Effeney – 2017 ASM Brisbane launch
FPM NZ Visitor’s LectureChair: Professor Ted Shipton, FPM DeanDr Steven Cohen (FPM NZ Visitor) Military pain medicine
10-10.30am Morning tea, healthcare industry exhibition10.30am-noon CONCURRENT SESSION 10: ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
Airway SIGTHRIVE: edging ahead in apnoeic ventilationChair: Dr Paul Baker
CONCURRENT SESSION 11: Great Hall, Auckland Town HallWelfare of Anaesthetists SIGWay too close to the edge?Chair: Dr Marion Andrew
CONCURRENT SESSION 12: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreDay Care Anaesthesia SIGDaystay in the geriatric patientChair: Dr Tomoko Hara
FACULTY OF PAIN MEDICINE 4: Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentreFPM Dean’s Prize and FPM Best Free Paper SessionChair: Professor Milton Cohen
WORKSHOP Limelight 1, Aotea Centre MODERATED ePOSTER SESSION: Regional anaesthesia Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
High flow humidified oxygen and the management of hypoxiaDr Anil PatelThe fluid mechanics of the airwayMr Matthew Payton
General problem and incidence in anaesthesiaDr Catherine Purdy“Who – me – an addict?”Dr Ruth MayallManaging substance use in anaesthetistsDr Nghi PhungMedical board’s perspective – reporting, monitoring, rehab and complianceAssociate Professor Richard Walsh
Improving the selection process: fitness and readinessDr Lisa ChapmanPost operative deliriumDr Chantal McNallyPerioperative management of geriatric patientsDr Shravani Gupta
DEANS’S PRIZE:Retrospective audit of IV ketamine infusions in chronic pain patientsDr Chui ChongEffectiveness and safety of lignocaine 5% patches in the treatment of neuropathic pain disordersDr Justin Ti Postoperative analgesic efficacy of continuous wound infusion of local anaesthetic compared to opioid patient controlled analgesia after laparotomy: a prospective studyDr Linda Trang BEST FREE PAPER:Reduction of chronic post-surgical pain with ketamine (ROCKet) pilot trial Associate Professor Philip PeytonCan perioperative factors differentiate patients who develop persistent pain after total knee arthroplasty?Dr David Rice Meta-analysis of the effectiveness of perioperative ketamine to reduce persistent postsurgical painAssociate Professor Philip Peyton
W36A: EMAC instructors CPD debrief workshop. An informal lunch for prospective and current EMAC instructors will follow the workshop. You do not need to have attended this workshop.
Refer to page 24
noon-1.30pm EMAC lunch Limelight 1, Aotea Centre, healthcare industry exhibition, ANZCA Trainee Luncheon Box Cafe and Bar, Aotea Centre FPM AGM Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea Centre, LS02 sponsored lunchtime session Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea Centre1.30-3pm CONCURRENT SESSION 13: ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
Airway SIGSimplifying complex airwaysChair: Dr Tish Stefanutto
CONCURRENT SESSION 14: Great Hall, Auckland Town HallMedical Education SIGTraits, technology and tutelageChair: Dr Kerryn Bunbury
CONCURRENT SESSION 15: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreAustralia and New Zealand Anaesthetic Allergy Group (ANZAAG)New solutions for anaphylaxisChair: Dr Peter Cooke
FACULTY OF PAIN MEDICINE 5: Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentrePsychology and painChair: Dr Newman Harris
MODERATED ePOSTER SESSION: Clinical anaesthesia Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
Human factors in airway managementDr Stuart MarshallDifficult airway management/Standard operating protocols Dr Paul BakerAdvanced fiberoptic airway techniquesProfessor Adam LawManagement of the complex difficult pediatric airway Dr Sim Jagannathan
Personality – how does it influence a teaching interaction?Dr Marion AndrewInternational developments in workplace based assessment – methods and technologiesDr Ian GrahamCoaching 101 with the struggling trainee/physician – a brief overviewDr Dawn Martin
ANZCA/ANZAAG anaphylaxis management guidelines 2nd version 2016Dr Helen KolawoleMulti-dimensional approach to anaesthetic reactionsProfessor Brian Broom Perioperative allergy: answers to your questionsDr Helen Crilly, Dr Penny Fitzharris
Pain and sleepMr Malcolm JohnsonHow expectations influence drug response and side effectsProfessor Keith Petrie Venturing beyond relaxation – mindfulness and psychological flexibilityMr Dieter Dvorak
Refer to page 25
3-3.30pm Afternoon tea, healthcare industry exhibition3.30-5pm CONCURRENT SESSION 16: ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
FluidsSearching for the haemodynamic edgeChair: Professor Paul Myles
CONCURRENT SESSION 17: Great Hall, Auckland Town HallACCUTE SIGAdversity starts with “A”: Africa, Antarctica and avalanchesChair: Dr Jamin Mulvey
CONCURRENT SESSION 18: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreMalignant hyperthermia (MH) and WebAIRSMH and crisis managementChair: Dr Neil Pollock
FACULTY OF PAIN MEDICINE 6: Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentreAcute Pain SIGHot off the pressChair: Dr David Jones
WORKSHOP Limelight 1, Aotea Centre MODERATED ePOSTER SESSION: Technology and Airway Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
Pro GDTDr Tuong PhanCon GDTProfessor Tomás CorcoranPerioperative endothelial dysfunctionAssociate Professor Bernhard Riedel
EbolaDr Jenny StedmonAnaesthesia and retrieval in AntarcticaDr Nick LerchEverest base camp avalancheDr Megan Walmsley
Genetics of malignant hyperthermiaProfessor Kathryn StowellThe changing face of malignant hyperthermia, a New Zealand perspectiveDr Terasa BulgerWebAIRS: strategies to analyse and manage anaesthetic crisesDr Martin Culwick
EBPM: launch of the new editionProfessor Stephan Schug Opioids: what are the real differencesDr Steve JonesOpioid free anaesthesiaDr Adrian Sultana
W35B: Stepping back from the edge! Support for SOTs and their role in the ANZCA curriculum
Refer to page 25
5-5.30pm ANZCA AGM ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
5.30-6pm AGM of New Zealand Fellows of ANZCA ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
5.30-7pm Anaesthesia and Pain Medicine Foundation Cocktail Reception Council Chamber, Auckland Town Hall
20
Scientific program continued
Tuesday May 3, 2016
7-8.15am BS02 Sponsored breakfast session Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea Centre8.30-10am Organising Committee Visitor’s Lecture ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
Chair: Dr Genevieve Goulding, ANZCA PresidentProfessor John Fraser (Organising Committee Visitor) Bionic hearts and lungs: Closer than you think?Dr Alan McLintic Reifying and raging about race in medicineProfessor Jamie Sleigh Dysintegration of brain regions – The explanation of general anaesthesia
WORKSHOP Auckland Zoo
W19A: Zoo anaesthesia (8.30am-1pm)10-10.30am Morning tea, healthcare industry exhibition10.30am-noon Gilbert Brown Prize Session ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
Chair: Professor Alan MerryPrewarming neurosurgical patients to minimise hypotension on induction of anaesthesia: a randomised trialDr Jai Darvall
A prospective cadaver study comparing three fibreoptic techniques for converting an LMA to a cuffed endotracheal tubeDr Benjamin OlesnickyPerioperative inflammation and immunosuppression: potential mechanisms whereby cyclo-oxygenase-2 inhibitors may impact cancer recurrenceDr Jonathan Hiller
Venous thromboembolism prophylaxis after elective and emergency caesarean section – Are we keeping patients safe?Dr Matthew Drake
A randomised controlled trial comparing ultrasound and palpation assisted combined spinal epidural anaesthesia for elective caesarean sectionDr Adrian Chin
noon-1.30pm Lunch, healthcare industry exhibition, Retired Anaesthetists’ luncheon Limelight 1, Aotea Centre 12.15-1.15pm TRAINEE ePOSTER PRIZE SESSION Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea Centre & OPEN ePOSTER PRIZE SESSION Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre Refer to page 241.30-3pm CONCURRENT SESSION 19: ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
Regional Anaesthesia SIGPeripheral solutions to a core problemChair: Dr Neil MacLennan
CONCURRENT SESSION 20: Great Hall, Auckland Town HallPhysiology/ICUBasic science – bridging the gapChair: Dr Jon Casement
CONCURRENT SESSION 21: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreSafety and quality: learning from mortality reviewChair: Dr Leona Wilson
CONCURRENT SESSION 22: ANZCA research grantsChair: Professor David Story
WORKSHOP Limelight 1, Aotea Centre MODERATED ePOSTER SESSION: Obstetrics and Education Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
Introduction to alternatives to the epiduralDr Chris NixonTAP cathetersDr Phillip CowlishawRectus sheath cathetersDr Matthew RucklidgeWound cathetersDr Kelly Byrne
Fizzyology: overlap between the underwater world and anaesthesiaAssociate Professor Simon MitchellHaemodynamic resuscitation: integrating physiology and evidenceProfessor John MyburghFeverDr Paul Young
Lessons from UK mortality reviewProfessor Carol PedenCock Robin flies again Professor Alan MerryNursing perspectiveMs Teena RobinsonLearning from perioperative mortality review – improving care for MaoriProfessor Denise Wilson
ANZCA funded research – the cutting edgePerioperative opioids and tumour growth and metastasisDr David SturgessA randomized clinical non-inferiority trial of phenylephrine and metaraminol infusions at the time of spinal anaesthesia for elective caesarean deliveryAssociate Professor Nolan McDonnell The impact of preoperative goal-focused transthoracic echocardiography on outcome after hip fracture surgeryAssociate Professor David Canty The environmental footprint of morphine productionDr Forbes McGain Does varying the chloride content of intravenous fluid alter the risk of acute kidney injury after cardiac surgery?’ Dr Dave McIlroy
W37A: What would you tell a colleague who is considering retirement?
Refer to page 25
3-3.30pm Afternoon tea, healthcare industry exhibition3.30-5pm CONCURRENT SESSION 23: ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
Regional Anaesthesia SIGGetting together to make a differenceChair: Dr Andrew Cameron
CONCURRENT SESSION 24: Great Hall, Auckland Town HallRecent advancesChair: Associate Professor Simon Mitchell
CONCURRENT SESSION 25: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreTechnology in anaesthesia – funding, fires, forensic laser beams and the automated anaesthetistChair: Dr Matt Taylor
CONCURRENT SESSION 26: Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentreANZCA Trainee Academic PrizeChair: Associate Professor Michael Bennett
CONCURRENT SESSION 27: Lower NZI 3, Aotea CentreHistory SIGChair: Dr Di Khursandi
Lower limb arthroplasty and neck of femur fractures – nationalised quality improvement dataMr Simon DuffLower limb arthroplasty – what makes a difference?Dr Russell RarityNeck of femur fractures – what makes a difference?Dr Sunita PaulAdopting local infiltrative anaesthesia – the good and the badDr Nicholas LightfootEvolving research in arthroplasty and neck of femur fracture care Dr Jacob Munro
The cure for hepatitis CProfessor Ed GaneThe effect of general anaesthesia on sleep and the circadian clockDr Guy Warman
Operating room fires: pyrotechnics for anaesthetistsDr Murray StokanForensic evidence visualisation Mr Dion SheppardAnaesthetic machine automation is good… or the devil’s work?Associate Professor Ross KennedyFunding implications of evolving healthcare technologyMs Fiona Rutherford
Elective surgical outcomes of patients in Christchurch, New Zealand (the ESO study): a prospective observational studyDr Jessica TaylorDoes formalisation of handover and the use of a joint structured visual aid improve postoperative handover?Dr Adam HollingworthA prospective cohort controlled study comparing outcomes after continuous epidural infusion versus programmed intermittent epidural bolus plus patient-controlled epidural analgesia for labour analgesiaDr Sahil MathurIntraoperative train-of-four monitoring does not significantly reduce incidence of postoperative residual curarisationDr Chang Yang YewAn audit of intraoperative blood product usage pre- and post-implementation of rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM®) in a tertiary referral hospitalDr Julie LeeA survey of administration of fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2) during maintenance of anaesthesia in the well oxygenated adult patientDr Daniel Wood
Le Médecin malgré luiDr Mack HolmesWhy was Auckland late with anaesthesiaDr Basil HutchinsonAnaesthesia as my careerProfessor John Gibbs
7pm-midnight Gala Dinner Waiheke room 1 & 2, ANZ Viaduct Events Centre
Highlights:• Professor John Fraser’s lecture
“Bionic hearts and lungs: Closer than you think?”.
• Gilbert Brown Prize Session.
• Diving and anaesthesia by 2015 DAN/Rolex Diver of the Year and Fellow of the Explorer’s Club of New York Associate Professor Simon Mitchell.
• Join us for our Great Gatsby Gala Dinner.
Correct at time of printing. Please visit asm.anzca.edu.au for updated information.
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7-8.15am BS02 Sponsored breakfast session Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea Centre8.30-10am Organising Committee Visitor’s Lecture ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
Chair: Dr Genevieve Goulding, ANZCA PresidentProfessor John Fraser (Organising Committee Visitor) Bionic hearts and lungs: Closer than you think?Dr Alan McLintic Reifying and raging about race in medicineProfessor Jamie Sleigh Dysintegration of brain regions – The explanation of general anaesthesia
WORKSHOP Auckland Zoo
W19A: Zoo anaesthesia (8.30am-1pm)10-10.30am Morning tea, healthcare industry exhibition10.30am-noon Gilbert Brown Prize Session ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
Chair: Professor Alan MerryPrewarming neurosurgical patients to minimise hypotension on induction of anaesthesia: a randomised trialDr Jai Darvall
A prospective cadaver study comparing three fibreoptic techniques for converting an LMA to a cuffed endotracheal tubeDr Benjamin OlesnickyPerioperative inflammation and immunosuppression: potential mechanisms whereby cyclo-oxygenase-2 inhibitors may impact cancer recurrenceDr Jonathan Hiller
Venous thromboembolism prophylaxis after elective and emergency caesarean section – Are we keeping patients safe?Dr Matthew Drake
A randomised controlled trial comparing ultrasound and palpation assisted combined spinal epidural anaesthesia for elective caesarean sectionDr Adrian Chin
noon-1.30pm Lunch, healthcare industry exhibition, Retired Anaesthetists’ luncheon Limelight 1, Aotea Centre 12.15-1.15pm TRAINEE ePOSTER PRIZE SESSION Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea Centre & OPEN ePOSTER PRIZE SESSION Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre Refer to page 241.30-3pm CONCURRENT SESSION 19: ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
Regional Anaesthesia SIGPeripheral solutions to a core problemChair: Dr Neil MacLennan
CONCURRENT SESSION 20: Great Hall, Auckland Town HallPhysiology/ICUBasic science – bridging the gapChair: Dr Jon Casement
CONCURRENT SESSION 21: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreSafety and quality: learning from mortality reviewChair: Dr Leona Wilson
CONCURRENT SESSION 22: ANZCA research grantsChair: Professor David Story
WORKSHOP Limelight 1, Aotea Centre MODERATED ePOSTER SESSION: Obstetrics and Education Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
Introduction to alternatives to the epiduralDr Chris NixonTAP cathetersDr Phillip CowlishawRectus sheath cathetersDr Matthew RucklidgeWound cathetersDr Kelly Byrne
Fizzyology: overlap between the underwater world and anaesthesiaAssociate Professor Simon MitchellHaemodynamic resuscitation: integrating physiology and evidenceProfessor John MyburghFeverDr Paul Young
Lessons from UK mortality reviewProfessor Carol PedenCock Robin flies again Professor Alan MerryNursing perspectiveMs Teena RobinsonLearning from perioperative mortality review – improving care for MaoriProfessor Denise Wilson
ANZCA funded research – the cutting edgePerioperative opioids and tumour growth and metastasisDr David SturgessA randomized clinical non-inferiority trial of phenylephrine and metaraminol infusions at the time of spinal anaesthesia for elective caesarean deliveryAssociate Professor Nolan McDonnell The impact of preoperative goal-focused transthoracic echocardiography on outcome after hip fracture surgeryAssociate Professor David Canty The environmental footprint of morphine productionDr Forbes McGain Does varying the chloride content of intravenous fluid alter the risk of acute kidney injury after cardiac surgery?’ Dr Dave McIlroy
W37A: What would you tell a colleague who is considering retirement?
Refer to page 25
3-3.30pm Afternoon tea, healthcare industry exhibition3.30-5pm CONCURRENT SESSION 23: ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
Regional Anaesthesia SIGGetting together to make a differenceChair: Dr Andrew Cameron
CONCURRENT SESSION 24: Great Hall, Auckland Town HallRecent advancesChair: Associate Professor Simon Mitchell
CONCURRENT SESSION 25: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreTechnology in anaesthesia – funding, fires, forensic laser beams and the automated anaesthetistChair: Dr Matt Taylor
CONCURRENT SESSION 26: Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentreANZCA Trainee Academic PrizeChair: Associate Professor Michael Bennett
CONCURRENT SESSION 27: Lower NZI 3, Aotea CentreHistory SIGChair: Dr Di Khursandi
Lower limb arthroplasty and neck of femur fractures – nationalised quality improvement dataMr Simon DuffLower limb arthroplasty – what makes a difference?Dr Russell RarityNeck of femur fractures – what makes a difference?Dr Sunita PaulAdopting local infiltrative anaesthesia – the good and the badDr Nicholas LightfootEvolving research in arthroplasty and neck of femur fracture care Dr Jacob Munro
The cure for hepatitis CProfessor Ed GaneThe effect of general anaesthesia on sleep and the circadian clockDr Guy Warman
Operating room fires: pyrotechnics for anaesthetistsDr Murray StokanForensic evidence visualisation Mr Dion SheppardAnaesthetic machine automation is good… or the devil’s work?Associate Professor Ross KennedyFunding implications of evolving healthcare technologyMs Fiona Rutherford
Elective surgical outcomes of patients in Christchurch, New Zealand (the ESO study): a prospective observational studyDr Jessica TaylorDoes formalisation of handover and the use of a joint structured visual aid improve postoperative handover?Dr Adam HollingworthA prospective cohort controlled study comparing outcomes after continuous epidural infusion versus programmed intermittent epidural bolus plus patient-controlled epidural analgesia for labour analgesiaDr Sahil MathurIntraoperative train-of-four monitoring does not significantly reduce incidence of postoperative residual curarisationDr Chang Yang YewAn audit of intraoperative blood product usage pre- and post-implementation of rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM®) in a tertiary referral hospitalDr Julie LeeA survey of administration of fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2) during maintenance of anaesthesia in the well oxygenated adult patientDr Daniel Wood
Le Médecin malgré luiDr Mack HolmesWhy was Auckland late with anaesthesiaDr Basil HutchinsonAnaesthesia as my careerProfessor John Gibbs
7pm-midnight Gala Dinner Waiheke room 1 & 2, ANZ Viaduct Events Centre
Don’t miss the ePoster prize sessions at lunchtime!Trainee ePoster prize session: 12.15-1.15pm Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea Centre
Open ePoster prize session: 12.15-1.15pmLower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
For details refer to page 24.
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Scientific program continued
Wednesday May 4, 2016
“Nanogirl”: How nanotechnology will change our lives!
Don’t miss this closing session.
8.30-10am CONCURRENT SESSION 27: ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreDelirium Taking the confusion out of deliriumChair: Dr Nigel Robertson
CONCURRENT SESSION 28: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreDiving and Hyperbaric Medicine SIGPearls of submersionChair: Dr Suzy Szekely
CONCURRENT SESSION 29: Lower NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentreCommunication in Anaesthesia SIGCommunicating close to the edge – mission possible?Chair: Dr Jo Sutherland
CONCURRENT SESSION 30: Lower NZI 3, Aotea CentreLeadership and Management SIG Developing leadership: tales from the topChair: Professor Guy Ludbrook
WORKSHOP Limelight 1, Aotea Centre
Cognition in the communityDr Philip Wood A crash course in delirium diagnosisAssociate Professor David A ScottPrevention and treatment of deliriumAssociate Professor Lisbeth Evered
Over the edge and into the deepAssociate Professor Mike BennettUpdates in the management of emergency department (ED) presentations of hyperbaric conditionsDr Peter BruceHyperbaric oxygen therapy, ethics and evidence-based medicineDr Susannah Sherlock
The remarkable impact of communicating compassion on patient outcomesDr Robin YoungsonCommunicating the possible in the perioperative settingDr Linda SungEffective communication – mission possible!Ms Liz Crowe
Leading a values based organisation?Ms Ailsa ClaireImproving the quality of healthcare in NZ and beyond – conundrums of leadership and cultureProfessor Alan MerryIf I had only known…Mr Harry Burkhardt
W01C: Anaphylaxis – responding safely (8.30-10am)
10-10.30am Morning tea, healthcare industry exhibition
10.30am-noon Australasian Visitor’s Lecture ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreChair: Dr Genevieve Goulding, ANZCA PresidentProfessor Matthew Chan (Australasian Visitor) Lennard Travers presentation: genetics of chronic postsurgical painAssociate Professor Simon Mitchell Checking the checkers: patient safety in the operating roomAward Presentations of Gilbert Brown Prize Session, ANZCA Trainee Academic Prize, Trainee ePoster Prize and Open ePoster Prize
noon-1.30pm Lunch, healthcare industry exhibition
1.30-3pm CONCURRENT SESSION 31: ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreTrauma SIGBloody hellChair: Dr Kerry Gunn
CONCURRENT SESSION 32: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreCancerOnco-anaesthesiology – a new speciality?Chair: Associate Professor Nolan McDonnell
CONCURRENT SESSION 33: Lower NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentrePerioperative Medicine SIG Chair: Dr Dick Ongley
CONCURRENT SESSION 34: Lower NZI 3, Aotea CentreANZCA Clinical Trials NetworkPublishing your researchChair: Dr Ed O’Loughlin
MTP alternatives in austere environmentsDr Katia HayesPrehospital careDr Tony Smith Fibrinogen concentrateDr Herbert Schöchl
New developments in cancer managementDr Reuben Broom Pre-operative deconditioning and prehabilitation prior to major cancer surgeryDr Hilmy Ismail Is there an optimal anaesthesia technique for the cancer patient?Associate Professor Bernhard Riedel
The second victimDr Nic Randall Defining perioperative mortality dataDr Doug CampbellThe post operative period for anaesthetists Dr Jeremy Fernando
Presenting your resultsProfessor Warwick Ngan KeeGetting your results publishedProfessor Alan MerryEngaging the media and community in your researchMs Clea Hincks
3-3.30pm Afternoon tea, healthcare industry exhibition
3.30-5pm CLOSING SESSION ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreChair: Dr Michal KlugerPresident’s handover“Nanogirl” – tales from the future? How nanotechnology will change our lives!Dr Michelle DickinsonClosing debate – What my country has contributed to anaesthesia and pain medicineProfessor Carol Peden, Professor John Fraser, Associate Professor Simon Mitchell, Professor Kate Leslie, Dr Cynthia Wong and Dr John PereiraClosing address
5-6pm ANZCA New Council meeting Limelight 1, Aotea Centre
Correct at time of printing. Please visit asm.anzca.edu.au for updated information.
23
CPD programThis event is claimable by ANZCA CPD participants within the knowledge and skills, and emergency responses categories.
Knowledge and skills activitiesLectures, breakfast and lunchtime sessions: one credit per hour.
Workshops and small group discussions: two credits per hour.
Emergency responses activitiesANZCA workshop education sessions that include can’t intubate, can’t oxygenate (CICO), cardiac arrest, anaphylaxis, or major haemorrhage are recognised as suitable to be claimed as an emergency response activity.
Further detail regarding emergency responses education sessions and how to have them recognised as suitable can be found in the ANZCA CPD Handbook or on the ANZCA website.
ANZCA members will automatically have their attendance accredited to their CPD portfolio following the ASM in June 2016.
8.30-10am CONCURRENT SESSION 27: ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreDelirium Taking the confusion out of deliriumChair: Dr Nigel Robertson
CONCURRENT SESSION 28: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreDiving and Hyperbaric Medicine SIGPearls of submersionChair: Dr Suzy Szekely
CONCURRENT SESSION 29: Lower NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentreCommunication in Anaesthesia SIGCommunicating close to the edge – mission possible?Chair: Dr Jo Sutherland
CONCURRENT SESSION 30: Lower NZI 3, Aotea CentreLeadership and Management SIG Developing leadership: tales from the topChair: Professor Guy Ludbrook
WORKSHOP Limelight 1, Aotea Centre
Cognition in the communityDr Philip Wood A crash course in delirium diagnosisAssociate Professor David A ScottPrevention and treatment of deliriumAssociate Professor Lisbeth Evered
Over the edge and into the deepAssociate Professor Mike BennettUpdates in the management of emergency department (ED) presentations of hyperbaric conditionsDr Peter BruceHyperbaric oxygen therapy, ethics and evidence-based medicineDr Susannah Sherlock
The remarkable impact of communicating compassion on patient outcomesDr Robin YoungsonCommunicating the possible in the perioperative settingDr Linda SungEffective communication – mission possible!Ms Liz Crowe
Leading a values based organisation?Ms Ailsa ClaireImproving the quality of healthcare in NZ and beyond – conundrums of leadership and cultureProfessor Alan MerryIf I had only known…Mr Harry Burkhardt
W01C: Anaphylaxis – responding safely (8.30-10am)
10-10.30am Morning tea, healthcare industry exhibition
10.30am-noon Australasian Visitor’s Lecture ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreChair: Dr Genevieve Goulding, ANZCA PresidentProfessor Matthew Chan (Australasian Visitor) Lennard Travers presentation: genetics of chronic postsurgical painAssociate Professor Simon Mitchell Checking the checkers: patient safety in the operating roomAward Presentations of Gilbert Brown Prize Session, ANZCA Trainee Academic Prize, Trainee ePoster Prize and Open ePoster Prize
noon-1.30pm Lunch, healthcare industry exhibition
1.30-3pm CONCURRENT SESSION 31: ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreTrauma SIGBloody hellChair: Dr Kerry Gunn
CONCURRENT SESSION 32: Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea CentreCancerOnco-anaesthesiology – a new speciality?Chair: Associate Professor Nolan McDonnell
CONCURRENT SESSION 33: Lower NZI 4 & 5, Aotea CentrePerioperative Medicine SIG Chair: Dr Dick Ongley
CONCURRENT SESSION 34: Lower NZI 3, Aotea CentreANZCA Clinical Trials NetworkPublishing your researchChair: Dr Ed O’Loughlin
MTP alternatives in austere environmentsDr Katia HayesPrehospital careDr Tony Smith Fibrinogen concentrateDr Herbert Schöchl
New developments in cancer managementDr Reuben Broom Pre-operative deconditioning and prehabilitation prior to major cancer surgeryDr Hilmy Ismail Is there an optimal anaesthesia technique for the cancer patient?Associate Professor Bernhard Riedel
The second victimDr Nic Randall Defining perioperative mortality dataDr Doug CampbellThe post operative period for anaesthetists Dr Jeremy Fernando
Presenting your resultsProfessor Warwick Ngan KeeGetting your results publishedProfessor Alan MerryEngaging the media and community in your researchMs Clea Hincks
3-3.30pm Afternoon tea, healthcare industry exhibition
3.30-5pm CLOSING SESSION ASB Theatre, Aotea CentreChair: Dr Michal KlugerPresident’s handover“Nanogirl” – tales from the future? How nanotechnology will change our lives!Dr Michelle DickinsonClosing debate – What my country has contributed to anaesthesia and pain medicineProfessor Carol Peden, Professor John Fraser, Associate Professor Simon Mitchell, Professor Kate Leslie, Dr Cynthia Wong and Dr John PereiraClosing address
5-6pm ANZCA New Council meeting Limelight 1, Aotea Centre
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Trainee ePoster prize sessionTuesday May 3 12.15-1.15pm
Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea Centre
Dr Adele MacMillan PAIN-T Pilot study: investigating post-discharge pain in paediatric tonsillectomy
Dr Gemma Malpas Emergency cricothyroidotomy – a survey of current practice and training
Dr Adam Hollingworth
Should a pre-procedure ultrasound scan be gold standard for all neuraxial techniques in obstetric anaesthesia?
Dr Amy Gaskell Pupillometry and postoperative pain: an observational study
Dr Katherine Lanigan
An audit of continuous adductor canal blocks for knee arthroplasty
Dr Timothy Tay Delayed emergence in Parkison’s patients undergoing deep brain stimulation surgery under general anaesthesia
Open ePoster prize sessionTuesday May 3 12.15-1.15pm
Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
Dr William Weightman
The proportion of adults with major vessels anterior to the trachea in the suprasternal notch
Professor James Tse
A novel nasal PAP mask assembly provided continuous oxygenation in patients with OSA, difficult airway and poor face-mask fit during induction of general anaesthesia and in patients with airway obstruction under deep sedation
Dr Natalie Kent Signs and symptoms resulting from administration of clinical doses of neostigmine routinely used for reversal of neuromuscular blockade, in awake human volunteers
Dr Kerryn Cook A retrospective observational study of patients with dilated cardiomyopathy undergoing non-cardiac surgery: can pre-operative risk factors predict peri-operative cardiac complications
Ms Ianthe Boden Lung infection prevention post-surgery major abdominal with pre-operative physiotherapy (LIPPSMAck POP) trial: a bi-national multi-centre randomised controlled trial
Professor Tony Gin Changes in somatosensory evoked potentials and postoperative neurological deficit – a porcine study
Moderated ePoster Session: Regional anaesthesia
Monday May 2 10.30am-noon
Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
Dr Damien Archbold
Ultrasound guided single-shot paravertebral blocks for renal and thoracic surgery in children: a two year snapshot of departmental practice
Dr Vasanth Rao Kadam
Comparison of transversus abdominis plane block continuous catheter infusion vs intermittent bolus dosing for postoperative analgesia in abdominal surgery – a randomised controlled (RCT) trial pilot study
Dr Qian Jun Tong A randomized controlled trial comparing single shot adductor canal block with local infiltration analgesia for postoperative analgesia after total knee arthroplasty
Dr Adrian Chin A randomised controlled trial comparing patient satisfaction after ultrasound and palpation assisted neuraxial anaesthesia
Dr Chong Tan The ALOHA Trial (intra-Articular LOcal anaesthetic in Hip Arthroscopy) – Effect of pre-emptive and reduced dose local analgesia on postoperative pain and analgesic requirements: a 3-arm, randomized, double-blinded, controlled clinical trial
Dr Vasanth Rao Kadam
Continuous transmuscular quadratus lumborum block catheter technique for post-operative pain relief in upper abdominal surgery – Case report
Moderated ePosters
Moderated ePosters sessions will allow authors to present information using high resolution images and up-to-date research.
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Moderated ePoster Session: Clinical anaesthesia
Monday May 2 1.30-3pm
Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
Dr Raeleen Barber Quality of recovery from sedation for endoscopy
Dr Sathish Krishnan
Improving efficiency and outcomes for patients having open reduction and internal fixation of ankle fracture; results of two quality improvement audit and comparison of parenteral analgesia vs peripheral nerve blockade for ankle fracture fixation performed under general anaesthesia
Dr Andrew Colls A prospective observational audit of regurgitation and aspiration complications of continuous enteral feeding in theatre in major burns patients
Dr Edmond O’Loughlin
The safety and efficacy of “Ultra-rapid” administration of iron polymaltose under general anaesthesia
Associate Professor Ross Kennedy
Exploring inter and intra-patient variability in response to rocuronium in real-time
Moderated ePoster Session: Technology and airway
Monday May 2 3.30-5pm
Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
Dr Michael Li Evaluating the GuardianCPVTM supraglottic airway device in a clinical setting
Associate Professor David Canty
Comparison of cardiac output measurement using 2 and 3 dimensional transoesophageal echocardiography with transpulmonary thermodilution during cardiac surgery
Dr Julie Lee ROTEM® thromboelastometry – A survey of anaesthetists’ experiences
Dr David Barlow Non-invasive ventilation achieves faster preoxygenation than standard high flow oxygen and is well tolerated: a randomised controlled trial
Dr Reshma Ambulkar
A randomized controlled trial comparing the McGrath Series 5 videolaryngoscope with the Macintosh laryngoscope for nasotracheal intubation in patients undergoing surgery for head and neck malignancies
Moderated ePoster Session: Obstetrics and education
Tuesday May 3 1.30-3pm
Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
Dr Victoria Eley “Early epidural analgesia”: practice guidelines are interpreted variably by specialist anaesthetists caring for obese parturients
Dr Aaron Pym Implementation of a post-operative nausea and vomiting protocol supported by individualised prescriber feedback can improve anti-emetic prophylaxis and patient outcomes
Ms Ellen Pascoe The Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists Specialist Training Program (STP) evaluation report
Dr Fung Chen Tsai Review of massive transfusion protocol activation for obstetric and gynaecological patients in a tertiary women’s hospital
Dr Timothy Cominos
Point-of-care obstetric simulation in a busy delivery suite: a popular and effective way to improve candidate confidence
Dr Emma Glasgow Does ultrasound measurement of maternal abdominal subcutaneous fat thickness at 20 weeks gestation predict the difficulty of epidural insertion at term? A pilot study
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AirwayDr Yun Jeong Chae Usefulness of dynamic palpation while
intubation for confirming endotracheal tube placement
Dr Timothy Cominos
Stick or twist? The front-of-neck preferences of senior anaesthetists in a large New Zealand teaching hospital
Dr Desmond Ho Success of blind tracheal intubation using the Auragain laryngeal airway compared with the intubating laryngeal mask (LMA Fastrach) by novice users: a manikin study
Dr Julie Lee Intraoperative cuff pressure measurements of endotracheal tubes
Dr Siva Sundari Arumugam
LMA cuff pressures – are we doing it right?
AnimalDr Jiangbei Cao Protective effects of edaravone on surgery
plus LPS administration-caused cognitive function impairment in adult rats
Case reportDr Neha Garg Escobar syndrome – Anesthetic
consideration: a case report
Dr Yi Lin Lee A patient’s experience undergoing 8 hour awake craniotomy
Dr Wan Yen Lim Anaesthesia for caesarean section in a parturient with newly diagnosed ventricular bigeminy
Dr Neisevilie Nisa Anesthetic management of an achondroplastic dwarf with difficult airway and spine for total hip replacement: a case report
Dr Shi Hong Shen Dispelling the curse: improvement of ventilatory drive in central alveolar hypoventilation syndrome after medullary infarction
Dr Christine Vien Epidural anesthesia complicated by subdural hygromas and a subdural hematoma
ClinicalDr Megan Allen The colorectal cancer, anaemia and
iron management (C-CaFe) – Pilot study: current practice, provider interest and feasibility
Dr Erez Ben-Menachem
Combined spinal-general anesthesia does not improve recovery outcomes for robot-assisted radical prostatectomy
Ms Ianthe Boden Hospital costs of respiratory complications following abdominal surgery: implications for service provision and interpretation of clinical trials
Ms Ianthe Boden The Melbourne respiratory complication risk prediction tool accurately predicts patients unlikely to get a respiratory complication following major open upper abdominal surgery
Dr Alexander Courtney
Safety of sedation for endoscopy at the Royal Melbourne Hospital
Dr Jai Darvall Feasibility and acceptability of a pedometer guided physical activity intervention – A pilot study
Dr Jane Doan An update on the perioperative anticoagulation practices in a general hospital
Dr Natalie Kruit A prospective study of the relation between perioperative condition and disability after cardiac surgery
Dr Mark Fisher Intensive care admissions following peri-operative anaphylaxis at a large NZ teaching hospital
Dr Anthony Notaras A cross-sectional study of pre-operative medication adherence and early post-operative recovery
Dr Johanna Pigou Fasting times for paediatric patients. A Capital and Coast District Health Board audit
Dr Jade Radnor Pre-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation for traumatic cardiac arrest should be further evaluated – A systematic review
Dr David Rice Orthostatic intolerance after total hip arthroplasty: incidence, risk factors and effect on length of stay
Dr David Rowe Calories closer to theatre – Pre-op fasting not starving
Dr Sandeep Sharma
Effect of magnesium sulphate on coagulation in chronic liver disease. A randomized controlled study
Dr Moe Swe A comparative study of the effect of atracurium versus pancuronium on endotracheal intubation in Myanmar population
Dr Doris Tang Perioperative normothermia: an audit of a teaching hospital
Dr Tarin Ward Audit of screening for obstructive sleep apnoea using validated tools in a bariatric surgical population
Dr Andrew Woodhead
Relationship between diabetic variables and outcomes for coronary artery bypass grafting in diabetic patients
Dr Adam Wilson Do “tick boxes” for smoking cessation support, in the anaesthesia record, prompt anaesthetists to increase rates of stop-smoking advice and follow-up?
Mr Austin Yong-Sheng Lee
High or low volume intravenous Plasma-Lyte to prevent hypotension during sedation for elective colonoscopy
Mr Austin Yong-Sheng Lee
Survey of anaesthetists’ practice of sedation for gastrointestinal endoscopy
ePostersePosters will be displayed for the duration of the ASM on level 3 and level 5 in the HCI exhibition area.
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EducationAssociate Professor David Canty
Comparison of practical and interpretive focused cardiac ultrasound learning outcomes between a self-directed simulator and traditional live model course
Dr Jia Xin Chai Production pressures among anaesthesiologists in Singapore
Dr Timothy Cominos
Point-of-care obstetric simulation in a busy delivery suite: a popular and effective way to improve candidate confidence
Dr Jennifer Reilly Anaesthesia peer review group program in Newcastle, Australia: evaluation of the first two years
Dr Faizan Zia Effects of a short message service (SMS) by cellular phone to improve compliance with fasting guidelines in patients undergoing elective surgery
ObstetricsDr Sandra Derry An audit of neuraxial opioid use in
obstetric patients undergoing caesarean section over a one month period at John Hunter Hospital, Newcastle, Australia
Dr Jennifer Fu Failed conversion of labour epidural analgesia for anaesthesia in a tertiary obstetric hospital: a retrospective observational study of 200 consecutive epidurals
Dr Ashvini Kahawatta
Does the duration of surgery influence the amount of intra-operative fluids?
Dr Vanessa Percival Hot topics: a survey of past and future directions in obstetric anaesthesia research
Dr Andrew Wilson Accidental dural puncture after neuraxial procedures in parturients: a five-year review at Middlemore Hospital
PainDr Josef Attia Evaluation of the efficacy of different
regimens in decreasing the incidence of postherpetic neuralgia (PHN)
Dr Margaret Blanco Intravenous calcitonin – results in the treatment of chronic pain syndromes
Dr Paul Gray Does fentanyl still have a role in patient control analgesia (PCA)?
Dr Jessica Lim Management review of pain in pelvic exenteration patients
Dr Gavin Pattullo PIB with PCEA for labour epidurals – An evaluation of the introductory phase at a major tertiary centre
Dr Gavin Pattullo PIB with PCEA for thoracic epidural analgesia: a single centre evaluation over 2 years
Associate Professor Bernhard Riedel
Acute effects of pre-emptive multimodal analgesia in major open colorectal surgery
Dr Yasushi Satoh Hydrogen water mitigates neuropathic pain
Ms Rhema Susilo The efficacy of N-methyl-D-aspartic acid receptor antagonist drugs in reducing pain scores in patients with chronic neuropathic pain
Regional anaesthesiaDr Sanjay Bajaj Regional Anaesthesia Block Area (RABA):
an efficient model of operating room turnover
Dr Shedleyah Dhuny
An audit of interscalene nerve block in patients having elective shoulder surgery at Hollywood Private Hospital
Dr Melissa Jusaitis An audit of wrong-site regional anaesthesia in South Australia, and a campaign to reduce its occurrence
Dr Katherine Lanigan
An audit of continuous adductor canal blocks for knee arthroplasty
Dr Benjamin Snow Regional anaesthesia for patients with blunt thoracic trauma facilitated by introduction of a “Block Room”
TechnicalDr Raymond Hu Correcting for pulmonary acceleration
time with RVOT velocity time integral improves TOE-derived estimations of invasive mean pulmonary pressure but not pulmonary vascular resistance
Dr Eugene Lim Audit of intra-operative ventilation strategy in prolonged abdominal surgery
Dr Hee-Pyoung Park
Subclavian venous catheterization: a prospective randomized trial of thin-wall introducer needle technique versus catheter-over-needle technique with respect to success rate and incidence of catheterization-related complications
Dr In-Kyung Song Optimal level of the reference transducer for central venous pressure and pulmonary artery occlusion pressure monitoring in supine, prone and sitting position
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New Zealand Society of Anaesthetists (Inc)
Australia & New Zealand
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Workshops Stream: Emergency response
Anaphylaxis – responding safely
Facilitators: Dr Peter Cooke and Dr Karen Pedersen
Saturday April 30 W01A 8.30-10amW01B 10.30am-noon
Room: Marlborough 2, SkyCity Convention Centre
Wednesday May 4 W01C 8.30-10am
Location: Limelight 1, Aotea Centre
Can’t intubate, can’t oxygenate (CICO)
Facilitators: Dr Paul Baker, Dr Richard Walsh, Dr Annick Depuydt, Dr Grant Hounsell, Dr Jeanette Scott, Dr Ellen O’Sullivan
Saturday April 30 W02A 8.30-10amW02B 10.30am-noonW02C 1.30-3pm
Location: New Zealand 1A, SkyCity Convention Centre
High fidelity cardiac arrest simulation workshop
Facilitators: Dr Jane Torrie, Dr Michael Gillham, Dr Tom Burrows
Saturday April 30 W03A 8.30am-12.30pmW03B 1-5pm
Location: Tamaki Simulation Centre, Auckland
ACLS workshop
Facilitators: Mr Billy Doyle, Mr Craige Mayo, Mr Stefan Gabor, Dr Maria Mackintosh, Dr Thomas Fernandez, Dr Nola Ng
Saturday April 30 W04A 9am-noonW04B 1-4pm
Location: ADHB Clinical Skills Centre, Auckland Hospital
Stream: Regional anaesthesia
Regional anaesthesia for elbow and hand surgery
Facilitators: Dr Anthony Aho, Dr Andrew Wong, Dr Rob Burrell, Dr Grant Ryan
Saturday April 30 W05A 8.30-10amW05B 10.30am-noonW05C 1.30-3pmW05D 3.30-5pm
Location: Auckland 1A, SkyCity Convention Centre
Regional anaesthesia for shoulder surgery
Facilitators: Dr Jeremy Cooper, Dr Darcy Price, Dr Matt McGill, Dr Catherine Caldwell
Saturday April 30 W06A 8.30-10amW06B 10.30am-noonW06C 1.30-3pmW06D 3.30-5pm
Location: Auckland 1B, SkyCity Convention Centre
Regional anaesthesia for hip and knee surgery
Facilitators: Dr Craig Birch, Dr Peter Robinson, Dr Will Van Breda, Dr Andy Cameron
Saturday April 30 W07A 8.30-10amW07B 10.30am-noonW07C 1.30-3pmW07D 3.30-5pm
Location: Auckland 2A, SkyCity Convention Centre
Please note that a ticket is required for entry to all workshops. 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.
Correct at time of printing. Please visit asm.anzca.edu.au for updated information.
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Regional anaesthesia for foot and ankle surgery
Facilitators: Dr Kathryn Hagen, Dr Chris Nixon, Dr Clare Smith, Dr Phil Corke
Saturday April 30 W08A 8.30-10amW08B 10.30am-noonW08C 1.30-3pmW08D 3.30-5pm
Location: Auckland 2B, SkyCity Convention Centre
Regional anaesthesia for neuraxial and truncal blocks
Facilitators: Dr Matt Levine, Dr James Cameron, Dr Kelly Byrne, Dr Justin Holborow
Saturday April 30 W09A 8.30-10amW09B 10.30am-noonW09C 1.30-3pmW09D 3.30-5pm
Location: Auckland 3A, SkyCity Convention Centre
Ultrasound guided in-plane and out-of-plane needling skills
Facilitators: Dr Dick Ongley, Dr David Pirotta, Dr Neil MacLennan, Dr Nick Lightfoot
Saturday April 30 W10A 8.30-10amW10B 10.30am-noonW10C 1.30-3pmW10D 3.30-5pm
Location: Auckland 3B, SkyCity Convention Centre
Eye blocks
Facilitators: Dr Alfred Chua, Dr Rory Scott, Professor Chandra Kumar, Dr Phil Guise
Saturday April 30 W11A 8-10amW11B 10.30am-12.30pm
Location: New Zealand 1B, SkyCity Convention Centre
Stream: Airway management
Flexible bronchoscopy
Facilitators: Dr Anil Patel, Dr Margot Baker, Dr Grant Hounsell, Dr Daniel Cook, Dr Ellen O’Sullivan
Saturday April 30 W12A 8.30-10amW12B 10.30am-noon
Location: New Zealand 3B, SkyCity Convention Centre
Video laryngoscopy
Facilitators: Dr Adam Law, Dr Jeanette Scott, Dr Ellen O’Sullivan, Dr Sim Jagannathan, Dr Jeremy Cooper, Dr Paul Baker, Dr Anil Patel
Saturday April 30 W13A 8.30-10amW13B 1.30-3pm
Location: Auckland 4B, SkyCity Convention Centre
Paediatric airway
Facilitators: Dr Sim Jagannathan, Dr Henrick Hack, Dr Niall Watson, Dr Jane Thomas, Dr Lorna Rankin
Saturday April 30 W14A 10.30am-noonW14B 1.30-3pm
Location: Auckland 4A, SkyCity Convention Centre
Stream: Thoracic and resuscitation
Basic transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) simulator workshop
Facilitators: Professor Colin Royse, Associate Professor David Canty, Dr John Lau, Dr Yang Yang
Saturday April 30 W15A 9am-noonW15B 1-4pm
Location: Supper Room, Auckland Town Hall
Advanced ventilation skills
Facilitators: Dr Chris Thompson
Saturday April 30 W16A 1.30-3pmW16B 3.30-5pm
Location: New Zealand 3B, SkyCity Convention Centre
Supraclavicular subclavian central line insertion with in-plane ultrasound guidance
Facilitators: Dr Jamin Mulvey
Saturday April 30 W17A 8.30-10am
Location: New Zealand 4A, SkyCity Convention Centre
32
Workshops continued
Stream: Trauma and other
Anaesthesia and disaster response
Facilitators: Dr Maurice Lee, Dr Wayne Morriss, Dr Tony Diprose, Dr Alan Goodey, Dr Ted Hughes, Dr Dan Holmes, Dr Brian Spain, Mr Charles Blanch, Mr Mike McEnaney
Saturday April 30 W18A 1-5pm
Location: Epsom 2, SkyCity Convention Centre
Zoo anaesthesia
Facilitators: Dr George Gorringe and Mr James Chatterton
Tuesday May 3 W19A 8.30am-1pm
Location: Auckland Zoo, Auckland
BMW Track day and roadside trauma workshop
Facilitator: Trauma Workshop
Dr Clare Fisher, Dr James Le Fevre
Facilitator: BMW driving experience:
Mr Mike Eady
Saturday April 30 W20A 9am-5pm
Location: Hampton Downs Race Track, Auckland
Airborne medical emergencies
Facilitators: Dr Nicola Emslie
Saturday April 30 W21A 9am-1pm
Location: Air New Zealand Training Centre, Auckland
Stream: Paediatrics
Paediatric anaesthesia near the edge and beyond
Facilitators: Dr Graham Knottenbelt, Dr Elsa Taylor, Dr Jenny Wright, Dr Lena Tan
Saturday April 30 W22A 3-5pm
Location: New Zealand 4A, SkyCity Convention Centre
Stream: Medico-legal, aid and communication
Process communication model: Key2Me
Facilitators: Dr Andrew Robinson and Dr Marion Andrew
Saturday April 30 W23A 8am-noonW23B 1-5pm
Location: New Zealand 2A, SkyCity Convention Centre
Practical hypnosis for the busy anaesthetist
Facilitators: Dr Allan Cyna and Dr Suyin Tan
Saturday April 30 W24A 9am-noon
Location: New Zealand 3A, SkyCity Convention Centre
Managing adverse outcomes
Facilitator: Dr John Marwick
Saturday April 30 W25A 9am-noon
Location: New Zealand 2B, SkyCity Convention Centre
Mastering your risk
Facilitator: Dr John Marwick
Saturday April 30 W26A 2-5pm
Location: New Zealand 2B, SkyCity Convention Centre
Stream: Business and leadership
Principles of lean thinking
Facilitator: Mr Justin Kennedy-Good
Saturday April 30 W27A 10.30am-noon
Location: Executive boardroom, SkyCity Convention Centre
The unknown edge: Writing a business case for dummies
Facilitator: Mr Leigh Oliver
Saturday April 30 W28A 1.30-3pm
Location: Marlborough 2, SkyCity Convention Centre
Mastering your electronic health record – feel the fEHR
Facilitator: Dr Lara Hopley
Saturday April 30 W29A 9am–noon
Location: New Zealand 4B, SkyCity Convention Centre
33
Stream: Education
Using the ANZCA library for research
Facilitator: Ms Laura Foley
Saturday April 30 W30A 1.30-3pm
Location: New Zealand 4B, SkyCity Convention Centre
Copyright and research
Facilitator: Ms Melanie Johnson
Saturday April 30 W31A 3.30-5pm
Location: New Zealand 4B, SkyCity Convention Centre
Embracing the edge! The ANZCA Roles in Practice and your department – how can we best introduce the roles into departmental teaching programs?
Facilitator: Dr Kerryn Bunbury
Saturday April 30 W32A 8.30-10am
Location: Epsom 2, SkyCity Convention Centre
Introducing the ANZCA Educators Program
Facilitator: Mr Maurice Hennessy
Saturday April 30 W33A 10.30am-noon
Location: Epsom 2, SkyCity Convention Centre
ANZCA training program 101: Pearls of wisdom for new supervisors of training, rotational supervisors, education officers and deputy education officers
Facilitators: Dr Leona Wilson and Dr Ian Graham
Saturday April 30 W34A 10.30am- noon
Location: Canterbury room, SkyCity Convention Centre
Stepping back from the edge! Support for SOTS and their role in the ANZCA curriculum
Facilitators: Dr Sarah Nicolson and Dr Jennifer Taylor
Sunday May 1 W35A 3.30-5pm
Room: Limelight 1, Aotea Centre
Monday May 2 W35B 3.30-5pm
Location: Limelight 1, Aotea Centre
EMAC Instructors CPD debrief workshop
Facilitators: Dr Jane Torrie, Dr Stuart Marshall, Associate Professor Jennifer Weller
Monday May 2 W36A 10.30am-noon
Room: Limelight 1, Aotea Centre
EMAC Lunch
Monday May 2 Noon - 1.30pm
Location: Limelight 1, Aotea Centre
Please join us for an informal lunch for prospective and current EMAC instructors. Come along and ask questions, share experiences and make suggestions. You do not need to have attended the preceding workshop.
What would you tell a colleague who is considering retirement?
Facilitators: Dr Di Khursandi
Tuesday May 3 W37A 1.30-3pm
Room: Limelight 1, Aotea Centre
34
Workshops continued
Stream: Pain medicine
The edge of discomfort – seeking secular help from the POPE
Facilitator: Professor Milton Cohen
Saturday April 30 W38A 8.30-10am
Location: Coromandel Room, SkyCity Convention Centre
Experimental pain testing – how and what
Facilitator: Dr David Rice
Saturday April 30 W39A 8.30-10am
Location: Executive Boardroom, SkyCity Convention Centre
CPD and me – reducing lifelong learning to ticks in boxes
Facilitator: Dr Michael Vagg
Saturday April 30 W40A 10.30-noon
Location: Coromandel Room, SkyCity Convention Centre
Pain and wellness
Facilitator: Dr John Pereira
Saturday April 30 W41A 10.30-noon
Location: Epsom 1, SkyCity Convention Centre
Pain management in the pregnant patient
Facilitator: Dr Duncan Wood
Saturday April 30 W42A 1.30-3pm
Location: Coromandel Room, SkyCity Convention Centre
Acute pain management in the patient on opioids
Facilitator: Professor Stephan Schug
Saturday April 30 W43A 3.30-5pm
Location: Canterbury Room, SkyCity Convention Centre
Interventional pain – practical troubleshooting
Facilitator: Dr Steven Cohen
Saturday April 30 W44A 3.30-5pm
Location: Coromandel Room, SkyCity Convention Centre
PBS Information: Restricted benefi t. 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 restricted benefi t and authority information.
Please review Product Information and State and Federal regulations before prescribing. Further information is available on request from the supplier. The Product Information for
TARGIN® tablets can be accessed at www.mundipharma.com.au/Products.html OPIOID THERAPY SHOULD ONLY BE PRESCRIBED AS PART OF A MULTIMODAL PAIN MANAGEMENT PLAN. ®TARGIN is a registered trade mark. Mundipharma Pty Limited ABN 87 081 322 509, 88 Phillip St, Sydney, NSW 2000. Tel: 1800 188 009. Saatchi & Saatchi Health MUN0388/ANZCA/H ORBIS AU-3140 Feb 16.TARGIN® tablets are indicated for the management of moderate to severe chronic pain unresponsive to non-narcotic analgesia.
MUN0388_ANZCA ad_DPS.indd 1 25/02/2016 4:29 pm
35
PBS Information: Restricted benefi t. 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 restricted benefi t and authority information.
Please review Product Information and State and Federal regulations before prescribing. Further information is available on request from the supplier. The Product Information for
TARGIN® tablets can be accessed at www.mundipharma.com.au/Products.html OPIOID THERAPY SHOULD ONLY BE PRESCRIBED AS PART OF A MULTIMODAL PAIN MANAGEMENT PLAN. ®TARGIN is a registered trade mark. Mundipharma Pty Limited ABN 87 081 322 509, 88 Phillip St, Sydney, NSW 2000. Tel: 1800 188 009. Saatchi & Saatchi Health MUN0388/ANZCA/H ORBIS AU-3140 Feb 16.TARGIN® tablets are indicated for the management of moderate to severe chronic pain unresponsive to non-narcotic analgesia.
MUN0388_ANZCA ad_DPS.indd 1 25/02/2016 4:29 pm
36
Small group discussions (SGDs)
Stream: Airway management
Tricky airway scenarios
Facilitators: Dr Tim Skinner
Saturday April 30 SGD01 8.30-10am
Location: Epsom 1, SkyCity Convention Centre
Airway badness: How I approach tricky patients using an evidence-based approach
Facilitators: Professor Adam Law
Sunday May 1 SGD02 10.30-noon
Location: Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
Stream: Burns
Burns anaesthesia
Facilitator: Dr Francois Stapelberg
Saturday April 30 SGD03 1.30-3pm
Location: Epsom 1, SkyCity Convention Centre
Stream: Cardiac
Minimally invasive aortic valve anaesthetic management
Facilitator: Dr Matt Chacko
Saturday April 30 SGD04 3.30-5pm
Location: Epsom 1, SkyCity Convention Centre
Stream: Complications
Neuropraxia assessment and management
Facilitator: Dr Richard Frith
Saturday April 30 SGD05 8.30-10am
Location: Epsom 3, SkyCity Convention Centre
Stream: Day stay anaesthesia
Sedation for endoscopy
Facilitator: Dr Megan Allen
Saturday April 30 SGD06 10:30-noon
Location: Epsom 3, SkyCity Convention Centre
Stream: Neurosurgery
New horizons in acute stroke management – anaesthesia for “clot retrieval”
Facilitator: Dr Nigel Robertson
Saturday April 30 SGD07 1.30-3pm
Location: Epsom 3, SkyCity Convention Centre
Stream: Obstetrics
The hypertensive woman on the delivery suite
Facilitator: Dr Matthew Drake
Saturday April 30 SGD08 3.30-5pm
Location: Epsom 3, SkyCity Convention Centre
Oh no, it’s a percreta!
Facilitator: Dr Mark Moll
Saturday April 30 SGD09 8.30-10am
Location: Parnell room, SkyCity Convention Centre
Obstetric epidural masterclass
Facilitator: Dr Cynthia Wong
Saturday April 30 SGD10 10.30-noon
Location: Parnell room, SkyCity Convention Centre
Please note that a ticket is required for entry to all small group discussions (SGD). 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 an SGD, please check with the registration desk on a daily basis. Any additional places will be allocated on a first-come-first-serve basis.
37
Collapsed parturient
Facilitator: Associate Professor Nolan McDonald
Saturday April 30 SGD11 1.30-3pm
Location: Parnell room, SkyCity Convention Centre
Stream: Obstetrics continued
The pregnant patient with a cardiac lesion
Facilitator: Dr Allan Brown
Saturday April 30 SGD12 3.30-5pm
Location: Parnell room, SkyCity Convention Centre
Stream: Orthopaedics
ERAS for orthopaedic surgery
Facilitator: Dr Gerard Willemsen
Saturday April 30 SGD13 8.30-10am
Location: Marlborough 1, SkyCity Convention Centre
Complex spine surgery – tips and pitfalls
Facilitator: Dr Nicole O’Brien
Saturday April 30 SGD14 10.30am-noon
Location: Marlborough 1, SkyCity Convention Centre
Stream: Other
Statistics for dummies
Facilitator: Dr Nicola Broadbent
Saturday April 30 SGD15 1.30-3pm
Location: Marlborough 1, SkyCity Convention Centre
Practical tools to diagnose how safe your care is – structured mortality reviews and global triggers
Facilitator: Professor Carol Peden
Saturday April 30 SGD16 3.30-5pm
Location: Marlborough 1, SkyCity Convention Centre
Stream: Paediatrics
Common paediatric problems and pitfalls
Facilitator: Dr James Houghton
Saturday April 30 SGD17 8.30-10am
Location: Marlborough 3, SkyCity Convention Centre
Stream: Perioperative medicine
The ultimate pre-operative test for the high risk patient? Cardio pulmonary exercise testing (CPET) for risk assessment and pre-operative planning
Facilitator: Dr Paul Dalley
Saturday April 30 SGD18 10.30-noon
Location: Marlborough 3, SkyCity Convention Centre
ERAS for colorectal surgery
Facilitator: Dr Felicity Pugh
Saturday April 30 SGD19 1.30-3pm
Location: Marlborough 3, SkyCity Convention Centre
Bariatric surgery high risk patient
Facilitator: Dr Ivan Bergman
Saturday April 30 SGD20 3.30-5pm
Location: Marlborough 3, SkyCity Convention Centre
Stream: Research
Getting started in research
Facilitator: Professor Kate Leslie and Ms Karen Goulding
Saturday April 30 SGD21 8.30-10am
Location: Executive Boardroom, SkyCity Convention Centre
Stream: Welfare
The impaired anaesthetist
Facilitator: Dr Rob Fry
Saturday April 30 SGD22 10.30-noon
Location: Business Suite 1, SkyCity Convention Centre
Ethical dilemmas
Facilitator: Dr Liam O’Hara
Saturday April 30 SGD23 1.30-3pm
Location: Canterbury room, SkyCity Convention Centre
Invited speakersDr Leinani Aiono-Le-Tagaloa Wanganui, New ZealandDr Sara Allen Auckland, New ZealandDr Marion Andrew South Australia, AustraliaDr Luke Arthur South Australia, AustraliaDr Chris Bain Victoria, AustraliaDr Paul Baker Auckland, New ZealandProfessor Alan Barber Auckland, New ZealandAssociate Professor Mike Bennett New South Wales, Australia Dr Stefan Brew Auckland, New ZealandDr Reuben Broom Auckland, New ZealandProfessor Brian Broom Auckland, New ZealandDr Peter Bruce South Australia, AustraliaDr Terasa Bulger Manawatu New ZealandMr Harry Burkhardt Auckland, New ZealandDr Kelly Byrne Hamilton, New ZealandDr Doug Campbell Auckland, New ZealandDr David Canty Victoria, AustraliaDr Lisa Chapman Auckland, New ZealandMs Ailsa Claire Auckland, New ZealandProfessor Tomás Corcoran Western Australia, AustraliaDr Phillip Cowlishaw Queensland, AustraliaDr Helen Crilly Queensland, AustraliaMs Liz Crowe Queensland, Australia
Dr Martin Culwick Queensland, AustraliaMs Kate Davenport Auckland, New ZealandProfessor Andrew Davidson Victoria, AustraliaDr Matthew Drake Auckland, New ZealandMr Simon Duff Auckland, New ZealandMr Dieter Dvorak Auckland, New ZealandDr Peter Dzendrowskyj Auckland, New ZealandDr Hinemoa Elder Auckland, New ZealandAssociate Professor Lisbeth Evered Victoria, AustraliaDr Jeremy Fernando Queensland, AustraliaDr Penny Fitzharris Auckland, New ZealandProfessor Ed Gane Auckland, New ZealandProfessor David Gerrard Dunedin, New ZealandProfessor John Gibbs Queensland, AustraliaDr Patrick Gladding Auckland, New ZealandDr Ian Graham Victoria, AustraliaDr Shravani Gupta New South Wales, AustraliaDr Chris Hanna Auckland, New ZealandDr Newman Harris New South Wales, AustraliaDr Katia Hayes Auckland, New ZealandMs Clea Hincks Victoria, AustraliaDr Mack Holmes Otago, New ZealandDr James Houghton Auckland, New ZealandDr Basil Hutchinson Auckland, New ZealandDr Hilmy Ismail Victoria, Australia
Mr Malcolm Johnson Auckland, New ZealandDr Steve Jones Hamilton, New ZealandAssociate Professor Ross Kennedy Christchurch, New ZealandDr Helen Kolawole Victoria, AustraliaDr Nick Lerch Northern Territory, AustraliaProfessor Kate Leslie Victoria, AustraliaDr Nicholas Lightfoot Auckland, New ZealandDr Stuart Marshall Victoria, AustraliaDr Dawn Martin Toronto, CanadaDr Ruth Mayall Cheshire, United KingdomAssociate Professor Nolan McDonnell Western Australia, AustraliaDr Forbes McGain Victoria, AustraliaDr Dave McIlroy Victoria, AustraliaDr Alan McLintic Auckland, New ZealandDr Chantal McNally Victoria, AustraliaProfessor Alan Merry Auckland, New ZealandAssociate Professor Simon Mitchell Auckland, New ZealandProfessor Hugh Montgomery London, United KingdomAssociate Professor Brendan Moore Queensland, AustraliaDr Jacob Munro Auckland, New ZealandProfessor John Myburgh New South Wales, AustraliaProfessor Paul Myles Victoria, AustraliaProfessor Warwick Ngan Kee New Territories, Hong KongDr Chris Nixon Auckland, New Zealand
Professor Ron Paterson Auckland, New ZealandMr Matthew Payton Auckland, New ZealandDr Sunita Paul Auckland, New ZealandProfessor Keith Petrie Auckland, New ZealandDr Tuong Phan Victoria, AustraliaDr Nghi Phung New South Wales, AustraliaDr Catherine Purdy Auckland, New ZealandDr Nic Randall Otahuhu, New ZealandDr Russell Rarity Timaru, New ZealandAssociate Professor Bernhard Riedel Victoria, AustraliaMs Teena Robinson Rotorua, New ZealandDr Matthew Rucklidge Western Australia, AustraliaMs Fiona Rutherford Wellington, New ZealandProfessor Stephan Schug Western Australia, AustraliaAssociate Professor David A Scott Victoria, AustraliaMr Dion Sheppard Auckland, New ZealandDr Susannah Sherlock Queensland, AustraliaDr David Sidebotham Auckland, New ZealandDr Justin Skowno New South Wales, AustraliaProfessor Jamie Sleigh Hamilton, New ZealandDr Tony Smith Auckland, New ZealandDr Jenny Stedmon Queensland, AustraliaDr Murray Stokan New South Wales, AustraliaProfessor David Story Victoria, AustraliaProfessor Kathryn Stowell Palmerston North, New Zealand
Dr David Sturgess Queensland, AustraliaDr Adrian Sultana New South Wales, AustraliaDr Linda Sung Queensland, AustraliaMr Campbell Thompson Auckland, New ZealandDr Megan Walmsley New South Wales, AustraliaAssociate Professor Richard Walsh New South Wales, AustraliaDr Guy Warman Auckland, New ZealandProfessor Denise Wilson Auckland, New ZealandDr Daniel Wood Auckland, New ZealandDr Philip Wood Auckland, New ZealandDr Laura Young Auckland, New ZealandDr Paul Young Wellington, New ZealandDr Robin Youngson Raglan, New Zealand
38
Workshop and small group discussion facilitatorsDr Anthony Aho Hamilton, New ZealandDr Megan Allen Victoria, Australia Dr Margot Baker Auckland, New ZealandDr Paul Baker Auckland, New ZealandDr Ivan Bergman Auckland, New ZealandDr Craig Birch Auckland, New ZealandMr Charles Blanch Auckland, New ZealandDr Nicola Broadbent Auckland, New ZealandDr Allan Brown Auckland, New ZealandDr Kerryn Bunbury Auckland, New ZealandDr Rob Burrell Auckland, New ZealandDr Tom Burrows Hamilton, New ZealandDr Catherine Caldwell Wellington, New ZealandDr James Cameron Lower Hutt, New ZealandDr James Cameron Lower Hutt, New ZealandDr David Canty Victoria, AustraliaDr Matt Chacko Auckland, New ZealandMr James Chatterton Auckland, New ZealandDr Alfred Chua New South Wales, AustraliaProfessor Milton Cohen New South Wales, Australia
Dr Daniel Cook United States of AmericaDr Peter Cooke Auckland, New ZealandDr Jeremy Cooper Auckland, New ZealandDr Philip Corke New South Wales, AustraliaDr Allan Cyna South Australia, AustraliaDr Paul Dalley Wellington, New ZealandDr Annick Depuydt Auckland, New ZealandDr Tony Diprose Hastings, New ZealandMr Billy Doyle Auckland, New ZealandDr Matthew Drake Auckland, New ZealandMr Mike Eady Auckland, New ZealandDr Nicola Emslie Auckland, New ZealandDr Thomas Fernandez Auckland, New ZealandDr Clare Fisher Auckland, New ZealandMs Laura Foley Victoria, AustraliaDr Richard Frith Auckland, New ZealandDr Rob Fry Auckland, New ZealandMr Stefan Gabor Auckland, New ZealandDr Michael Gillham Auckland, New ZealandDr Alan Goodey Hamilton, New ZealandDr George Gorringe Auckland, New ZealandMs Karen Goulding Victoria, AustraliaDr Phil Guise Auckland, New ZealandDr Henrick Hack Auckland, New ZealandDr Kathryn Hagen Auckland, New Zealand
Mr Maurice Hennessy Victoria, AustraliaDr Justin Holborow Dunedin, New ZealandDr Dan Holmes Northern Territory, AustraliaDr Lara Hopley Auckland, New ZealandDr James Houghton Auckland, New ZealandDr Grant Hounsell Auckland, New ZealandDr Ted Hughes Auckland, New ZealandMs Melanie Johnson Auckland, New ZealandMr Justin Kennedy-Good Auckland, New ZealandDr Di Khursandi Queensland, AustraliaDr Graham Knottenbelt Auckland, New ZealandProfessor Chandra Kumar SingaporeDr John Lau Hamilton, New ZealandDr Maurice Lee Auckland, New ZealandDr James Le Fevre Auckland, New ZealandProfessor Kate Leslie Victoria, AustraliaDr Matt Levine Wellington, New ZealandDr Maria Mackintosh Auckland, New ZealandDr Neil MacLennan Auckland, New ZealandDr Stuart Marshall Victoria, AustraliaDr John Marwick Wellington, New ZealandMr Craige Mayo Auckland, New ZealandMr Mike McEnaney Auckland, New ZealandAssociate Professor Nolan McDonnell Western Australia, AustraliaDr Matthew McGill Auckland, New Zealand
Dr Mark Moll Auckland, New ZealandDr Wayne Morriss Christchurch, New ZealandDr Jamin Mulvey Calgary, CanadaDr Nola Ng Auckland, New ZealandDr Sarah Nicolson Auckland, New ZealandDr Nicole O’Brien Auckland, New ZealandDr Liam O’Hara Auckland, New ZealandDr Leith Oliver Auckland, New ZealandDr Dick Ongley Auckland, New ZealandDr Ellen O’Sullivan Dublin, IrelandDr Karen Pedersen Auckland, New ZealandDr David Pirotta Wellington, New ZealandDr Darcy Price Auckland, New ZealandDr Felicity Pugh Auckland, New ZealandDr Lorna Rankin Auckland, New ZealandDr David Rice Auckland, New ZealandDr Nigel Robertson Auckland, New ZealandDr Andrew Robinson Rotorua, New Zealand Dr Peter Robinson Auckland, New ZealandProfessor Colin Royse Victoria, AustraliaDr Grant Ryan Auckland, New ZealandProfessor Stephan Schug Western Australia, AustraliaDr Jeanette Scott Auckland, New ZealandDr Rory Scott Auckland, New ZealandDr Tim Skinner Auckland, New Zealand
Dr Clare Smith Hamilton, New ZealandDr Brian Spain Northern Territory, AustraliaDr Lena Tan Auckland, New ZealandDr Suyin Tan New South Wales, AustraliaDr Elsa Taylor Auckland, New ZealandDr Jennifer Taylor Auckland, New ZealandDr Jane Thomas Auckland, New ZealandDr Chris Thompson New South Wales, Australia Dr Jane Torrie Auckland, New ZealandDr Michael Vagg Victoria, AustraliaDr William Van Breda Wellington, New ZealandDr Richard Walsh South Australia, AustraliaAssociate Professor Jennifer Weller Auckland, New ZealandDr Gerard Willemsen Auckland, New ZealandDr Leona Wilson Wellington, New ZealandDr Niall Wilton Auckland, New ZealandDr Andrew Wong Auckland, New ZealandDr Duncan Wood Auckland, New ZealandDr Jenny Wright Auckland, New ZealandDr Yang Yang Victoria, Australia
39
40
Prizes Gilbert Brown PrizeThe Gilbert Brown Prize is a prestigious prize awarded annually at the ASM. Eligibility for the prize is limited to Fellows of the College and the Faculty of Pain Medicine within eight 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 will be limited to Fellows who are 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 $A1000 for educational purposes. The Gilbert Brown Prize winner will also receive a certificate recognising the award. Please note only one abstract per author can be entered for consideration for this prize.
Tuesday May 3, 10.30-noon
ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre
ANZCA Trainee Academic PrizeThe ANZCA Trainee Academic Prize shall be awarded to the trainee or Fellow who is within one year of admission to fellowship and who is judged to have made the best contribution to the Trainee Academic Session held as part of the 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 will be accompanied by a certificate recognising the achievement.
Tuesday May 3, 3.30-5pm
Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea Centre
FPM Dean’s PrizeThe Faculty of Pain Medicine (FPM) Dean’s Prize is awarded for original work presented in the area of pain and judged to be a significant contribution to pain medicine and/or pain research. Eligibility is limited to trainees of the Faculty; trainees of the five participating professional bodies of the Faculty, or Fellows of FPM who are within eight years of admission to fellowship. Please note elected Fellows must be within eight 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 $A1000 for educational or research purposes. The prize will be awarded at the FPM Annual General Meeting held during the ASM.
Monday May 2, 10.30am-noon
Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea Centre
FPM Best Free Paper AwardThe Best Free Paper Award is for original work judged to be the best contribution to the FPM Free Paper session and is open to all ASM registrants. The prize takes the form of a certificate and a grant of $A500 for educational or research purposes. The prize will be awarded at the FPM Annual General Meeting held during the ASM.
Monday May 2, 10.30am-noon
Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea Centre
ePoster PrizesThe Organising Committee of the 2016 ASM will select two posters to be awarded a prize under the following categories:
ASM 2016 Open ePoster PrizeThe Open ePoster Prize will be awarded to the author(s) of the poster judged to be the best of those submitted in terms of originality, scientific rigor and quality of presentation. The prize of $A500 is to be used for recognised educational purposes.
Tuesday May 3, 12.15-1.15pm
Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre
ASM 2016 ANZCA Trainee ePoster PrizeThis prize of $A500 is to be used for a recognised educational purpose and will be awarded to the author(s) of a poster presented at the annual scientific meeting (ASM) by an ANZCA trainee or Fellow within one year of award of the Diploma of Fellowship which the Regional Organising Committee considers best of those submitted in terms of originality, scientific rigor and quality of presentation.
Tuesday May 3, 12.15-1.15pm
Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea Centre
Please note: If requested, the trainee must produce a letter or a form of proof from their anaesthetic college confirming their enrolment.
ePostersePosters will be displayed on large screens on level 3 and level 5 at the 2016 ASM to enable interactive browsing by all delegates.
40
Is it time to consider Lyrica?
(pregabalin)
When it’s time for a proven neuropathic pain treatment2
Neuropathic pain can often be
difficult to diagnose. It may at times
be hidden as a component of mixed
pain and can present with a broad
spectrum of features. Re-evaluate
your patients for neuropathic pain.1
Before prescribing, please review the full Data Sheet available from Medsafe (www.medsafe.govt.nz) or Pfizer New Zealand Ltd (www.pfizer.co.nz).LYRICA® (pregabalin) 25 mg, 75 mg, 150 mg & 300 mg capsules. Indications: Neuropathic pain in adults; adjunctive therapy in adults with partial seizures with or without secondary generalisation. Contraindications: Hypersensitivity to pregabalin or excipients. Warnings and 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. See Data Sheet for details. Interactions: CNS depressants; alcohol; lorazepam; oxycodone; medications causing constipation. See Data Sheet for details. Adverse Effects: Most common: dizziness, somnolence. Others include: blurred vision, fatigue, weight gain, dry mouth, headache, ataxia, peripheral oedema, impaired balance, diplopia, sedation. Post-marketing, serious: angioedema, allergic reaction, loss of consciousness, mental impairment, congestive heart failure, keratitis, pulmonary oedema. See Data Sheet for details. Dosage and Administration: 150 to 600 mg orally/day given 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 Data Sheet for details. Medicines Classification: Prescription medicine. Funding: Lyrica is an unfunded medicine – a prescription charge will apply. Before prescribing, please review the full Data Sheet available from Medsafe (www.medsafe.govt.nz) or Pfizer New Zealand Ltd (www.pfizer.co.nz). V11212 TAPS 1641SM References: 1. Freynhagen R, Bennett MI. BMJ. 2009; 339: 391–395. 2. Lyrica Data Sheet. Pfizer New Zealand Ltd, Level 1, Suite 1.4, Building B, 8 Nugent Street, Grafton, Auckland 1023. Medical Information: 0800 736 363. ®Registered trademark. PP-LYR-AUS-0214 February 2016 S&H 02/16 PFELY1219
PFELY1219_NZ_A4_[f2].indd 1 2/25/16 1:55 PM
ABN 82 055 042 852
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 Monday May 2, 2016, commencing at 5pm, in the ASB Theatre at the Aotea Centre, Auckland, New Zealand.
BUSINESS
1. To confirm the minutes of the ANZCA annual general meeting held on May 3, 2015.
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. To approve amendments to the Constitution.
7. To approve the appointment of Auditors for the Financial Year 2016.
8. 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
John IlottChief Executive Officer
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 Monday May 2, 2016 commencing at 12pm, Upper NZI 4 and NZI 5 at the Aotea Centre, Auckland, New Zealand.
BUSINESS
1. Apologies.
2. To confirm the minutes of the FPM annual general meeting held on May 3, 2015.
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 FPM 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 MorrisGeneral Manager
42
Business meetingsSaturday April 30, 2016
FPM Research Committee Meeting Skycity Executive Boardroom 7.30-8.30am
Education Officers Network Meeting Skycity Executive Boardroom 1-5pm
Sunday May 1, 2016
Specialist Training Program Forum Limelight 1, Aotea Centre 10.30am-12.30pm
Australian and New Zealand Anaesthetic Allergy Group (ANZAAG) Business Meeting Council Chamber, Auckland Town Hall
noon-1pm
DPA Assessor and Training Assessment Meeting Limelight 1, Aotea Centre 1.30-3pm
Indigenous Health Committee Meeting Council Chamber, Auckland Town Hall 1.30-3pm
Neuroanaesthesia SIG AGM Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea Centre 3-3.30pm
Obstetric Anaesthesia SIG AGM ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre 3-3.30pm
Anaesthesia Continuing Education (ACE) Business Meeting Limelight 2, Aotea Centre 3-5pm
Monday May 2, 2016
FPM AGM Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea Centre noon-12.30pm
Welfare SIG Business Meeting Great Hall, Auckland Town Hall noon-1pm
ANZCA Clinical Trials Network Meeting Council Chamber, Auckland Town Hall 12.30-1.30pm
FPM New Board Meeting Limelight 2, Aotea Centre 12.30-1.30pm
Acute Pain SIG AGM Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea Centre 3-3.30pm
The Anaesthesia and Critical Care in Unusual and Transport Environments (ACCUTE) SIG AGM Great Hall, Auckland Town Hall
3-3.30pm
FPM Learning and Development Committee Limelight 2, Aotea Centre 3-5pm
ANZCA AGM ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre 5-5.30pm
AGM of New Zealand Fellows of ANZCA ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre 5.30-6pm
Tuesday May 3, 2016
FPM CPD Committee Meeting Limelight 2, Aotea Centre 8.30-10.30am
Anaesthesia and Industry Liaison Committee (AILC) Meeting Limelight 2, Aotea Centre 1.30-3pm
Wednesday May 4, 2016
2017 ASM ROC Meeting Limelight 2, Aotea Centre 8.30-10am
Diving and Hyperbaric Medicine (DHM) SIG AGM Lower NZI 1 & 2, Aotea Centre 10-10.30am
Leadership and Management SIG Business Meeting Lower NZI 3, Aotea Centre 10-10.30am
Future Convenors Meeting Limelight 1, Aotea Centre noon-1.30pm
Perioperative Medicine SIG Business Meeting Upper NZI 4 & 5, Aotea Centre 3-3.30pm
Trauma SIG AGM ASB Theatre, Aotea Centre 3-3.30pm
ANZCA New Council Meeting Limelight 1, Aotea Centre 5-6pm
The ANZCA CEO Mr John Ilott will be available at the morning tea and afternoon tea breaks from Sunday to Wednesday to answer any queries Fellows and trainees may have about College administration.
Sunday May 1 to Wednesday May 4 Morning tea 10-10.30amAfternoon tea 3-3.30pmANZCA Lounge, booth numbers 66 and 67 Level 3, Aotea Centre
Meet the CEO
43
44
Abbvie Pty Ltd 37 5
Admedus (NZ) Ltd 41 5
Aft Pharmaceuticals 45 5
Allscripts 52 5
AMBU 20 & 21 5
ANZCA 66 & 67 3
ANZCA ASM 2017 55 3
Australian Society of Anaesthetists 36 5
Avant Mutual Group 43 5
Bank of New Zealand 73 3
Baxter Healthcare 28 5
B. Braun New Zealand 30 5
Beckton Dickinson Pty Ltd 7 5
Boehringer Ingelheim 29 5
Cook Medical 16 5
Direct Control 15 5
Draeger Medical Australia Pty Ltd 22 & 23 5
Edwards Lifesciences 74 & 75 3
Faculty of Pain Medicine 66 & 67 3
Fisher and Paykel Healthcare 59 & 60 3
Flinders University - Clinical Education 2 5
Fresenius Kabi 71 3
Fujiflim Sonosite 56 3
GE Healthcare 13 & 14 5
Getz Clinical 63 3
Global Medics 46 5
Heamonetics 17 5
Intermed Medical 34 5
Intersurgical 38 & 39 5
IX Biopharma Ltd 65 3
Karl Storz Endoscopy Australia 51 5
LifeHealthcare 35 5
Maquet Australia Pty Ltd 3 & 4 5
Masimo Australia Pty Ltd 49 5
MDA National Insurance 48 5
Medibroker 58 3
Medical Business Systems 42 5
MediTrust 12 5
Medtronic 24 & 25 5
Mercury Medical 8 & 9 5
Mindray 10 & 11 5
Mölnlycke Healthcare 54 3
MSD 5 & 6 5
Mundipharma Pty Limited 57 3
Perpetual Private 53 5
Pfizer 70 3
Philips 1 5
Safer Sleep 50 5
Smiths Medical Australasia 26 & 27 5
Teleflex Medical Australia & New Zealand 18 & 19 5
The Critical Group 33 5
USL Medical 61 3
Verathon 44 5
Vifor Pharma Pty Ltd 69 3
Visitor Information Centre I-site Skycity 72 3
16th World Congress of Anaesthesiologists 47 5
Booth Level Booth Level
Healthcare industry (HCI) sponsors and exhibitors index
45
59 60
61
62
63
65
66
6772
TO AirNZ FOYER
(LEVEL 5)
AOTEA SQUARE
TO O
WEN
S FOYER
(LEVEL
2)
TO A
OTEA G
ALLER
Y
(LEVEL
4)
EMERGENCY EXIT ONLY
EMERGENCY EXIT O
NLY
Limelig
ht R
ooms
TO OW
ENS FOYER
(LEVEL 2)
cafe/ticketing
CATERING
CATERING
CATERING
CATERING
7475
54
5556
57
58
68
69
71 70
73
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
15
16
17
19
20
2122
23
2425
2627
28
2930
32
33
34
35
36
37
3839
40
414243
44
45
46
474849
505152
53
18
13
14
1
2
DOOR H
TO A
OTE
A GALL
ERY
(LEVEL
4)
EMERGENCY EXIT ONLY
CO
LUM
N B
AR
DOOR G
EMERG
ENCY EXIT ONLY
EMER
GEN
CY EXIT
ONLY
EMERG
ENCY EXIT ONLY
EMERGENCY EXITONLY
TO BNZ FO
YER
(LEVEL 3)
EXTERNAL BALCONY
LIFT
S
TOASB THEATRE
TOASB THEATRE
A
CATERING
CATERING
CATERING
CA
TER
ING
31
Level 3
Level 5
HCI sponsors and exhibitors
floorplans
Aotea Centre
46
Exhibition opening timesThe HCI exhibition area will be open at the following times:
Sunday May 1, 201610am-6.30pmMonday May 2, 20168am-5pmTuesday May 3, 20168am-5pmWednesday May 4, 20168am-3.30pm
Name badges will be required for entry at all times. Children and non-medical patrons will not be permitted to enter the exhibition area at any time.
Catering timesAll catering will be served within the HCI exhibitor area, from Sunday May 1 to Wednesday May 4, 2016 at the following times:
Morning tea10-10.30amLunchnoon-1.30pmAfternoon tea3-3.30pm
Breakfast sessionsBreakfast will be served from 7am. Sessions will commence at 7.15am and conclude at 8.15am.
All sessions will be held within the Aotea Centre.
Monday May 2, 2016BS01: The use and unintended consequences of pharmaceutical opioids in Australia: How do we measure problematic use and what is the role of abuse deterrent formulations?Speaker: Dr Briony Larance PhD, NHMRC Australian Public Health Early Career Research Fellowship recipient and Research Fellow at the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre (NDARC) at UNSW Australia.
Kindly sponsored by:
Tuesday May 3, 2016BS02 Acute neuropathic pain in the perioperative and trauma setting underdiagnosed and undertreated.Speaker: Professor Stephan Schug, Director of Pain Medicine, Royal Perth Hospital, WA
Kindly sponsored by:
Lunchtime sessionsLunch will be served from noon. Sessions will commence at 12.15pm and conclude at 1.15pm.
All sessions will be held within the Aotea Centre.
Sunday May 1, 2016LS01: Wafermine: sublingual ketamine as a new option in pain managementSpeakers: Professor Stephan Schug, Director of Pain Medicine, Royal Perth Hospital, WA and Dr Paul Rolan, Director of Drug Development, iX Biopharma Ltd
Kindly sponsored by:
Monday May 2, 2016LS02: The Challenge of morbidity, variability and sustainability within healthcare: The role of ERAS, AHM and GDT.Speaker: Associate Professor Bernhard Riedel
Kindly sponsored by:
HCI sponsors and exhibitors sessions and times
Major sponsorsThe Regional Organising Committee gratefully acknowledges the following major sponsors for their support:
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. For further information please visit www.mundipharma.com.au.
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 all who rely on us. To learn more, please visit us at www.pfizer.com.au.
47
Abbvie Pty Ltd 37
Alicia Spagnuolo
Level 7 241 O’Riordan Street Mascot NSW 2020 Australia
+61 2 9035 8600
+61 413 736 505
www.abbvie.com.au
Admedus (NZ) Ltd 41
Amy Richmond
26 Harris Road Malaga WA 6090 Australia
1300 550 310
+61 421 924 245
www.admedus.com
Aft Pharamcuticals 45
Irena Nikovic
Suite 301 11B Wicks Road North Ryde NSW 2113 Australia
+61 2 9420 0420
www.aftpharm.com
Allscripts 52
Jessica Swanson
Level 1 580 Church Street Richmond VIC 3121 Australia
+61 3 9823 6291
+64 27 302 515
www.allscripts.com
AMBU 20 and 21
Erika O’Donnell
Unit 2 1 Prosperity Parade Warriewood NSW 2102 Australia
1300 233 118
+61 417 285 096
www.ambuaustralia.com.au
ANZCA ASM 2017 55
Bridget Effeney
ANZCA House, 630 St Kilda Rd Melbourne VIC 3004 Australia
+61 3 9510 6299
www.asm.anzca.edu.au
ANZCA House, 630 St Kilda Rd Melbourne VIC 3004 Australia
+61 3 9510 6299
[email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected]
www.anzca.edu.au
Level 7 EMC House, 45 Willeston Street Wellington 6011 New Zealand
+64 4 499 1213
www.anzca.org.nz
ANZCA 66 and 67
HCI sponsors and exhibitors profiles
Think BigANZCA ASM 2017
May 12-16 Brisbane
48
ASA 36
Denyse Robertson
Level 8 121 Walker street North Sydney NSW 2059 Australia
+61 2 8556 9717
+61 410 771 012
www.asa.org.au
Avant Mutual Group 43
Kristie Steggles
Level 28 HSBC Centre 580 George Street Sydney NSW 2000 Australia
+61 2 9260 9904
+61 481 411 154
www.avant.org.au
Bank of New Zealand 73
Rosalie Settle
BNZ Deloitte Building 80 Queen Street Auckland 1142 New Zealand
+64 9 976 5205
+64 21 511 027
www.bnz.co.nz/business-banking/partners/health
Baxter Healthcare 28
Claire Howse
PO Box 88 Toongabbie NSW 2146 Australia
+61 2 9848 1111
www.baxterhealthcare.com.au
Beckton Dickinson Pty Ltd 7
Trixi Allen
4 Research Park Drive Macquarie University North Ryde NSW 2113 Australia
+61 2 8875 7212
+61 419 212 341
www.bd.com
B. Braun New Zealand 30
Ben Olson
23 Falcon Street Parnell Auckland 1052 New Zealand
+64 9 368 4315
+64 21 840 993
www.bbraun.co.nz
Boehringer Ingelheim 29
Neil Jarvis
Po Box 76216 Manukau City 2241 New Zealand
+64 9 368 4315
+64 274 454 041
www.boehringer-ingelheim.com.au
Cook Medical 16
Matthew Monk
95 Brandl Street Eight Mile Plains QLD 4113 Australia
+61 7 3434 6000
+61 412 926 849
www.cookmedical.com/critical-care
Direct Control 15
John Peters
Montville QLD 4560 Australia
+61 7 5478 5510
+61 427 493 193
www.directcontrol.com.au
Draeger Medical Australia Pty Ltd
22 and 23
Customer Service
8 Acacia Place Notting Hill VIC 3168 Australia
1800 372 437
www.draeger.com
HCI profiles continued
49
Fujiflim Sonosite 56
Gina Kent
114 Old Pittwater Road Brookvale NSW 2100 Australia
+61 2 9938 8700
+61 417 401 537
www.sonosite.com.au
GE Healthcare 13 and 14
Kensi Naicker
Level 5 32 Phillip Street Parramatta NSW 2150 Australia
+61 2 9846 4705
+61 415 301 523
www.gehealthcare.com.au
Getz Clinical 63
David Conyers
28 Greenhill Road Wayville SA 5034 Australia
+61 8 8301 4035
+61 413 567 819
www.getzclinical.com
Global Medics 46
Peter Healy
Level 2 14 Martin Place Sydney NSW 2000 Australia
+61 2 8248 2900
+61 403 233 132
www.globalmedics.com
Haemonetics 17
Miriam Chan
Suite D, Level 2 Everglade Campus 82 Waterloo Road Macquarie Park NSW 2113 Australia
1800 209 515
www.haemonetics.com
Edwards Lifesciences
74 and 75
Sandy Scott
Unit 2 40 Talavera Road North Ryde NSW 2113 Australia
+61 2 8899 6309
+64 212 744 810
www.edwards.com
Faculty of Pain Medicine
66 and 67
Penny McMorran
ANZCA House 630 St Kilda Road Melbourne VIC 3007 Australia
+61 3 8517 5302
www.fpm.anzca.edu.au
Fisher and Paykel Healthcare
59 and 60
Mark Green
15 Maurice Paykel Place East Tamaki Auckland 2013 New Zealand
+64 21 309 383
www.fphcare.com
Flinders University – Clinical Education
2
Lori Tietz
PO Box 852 Renmark SA 5341 Australia
+61 8 8586 1026
+61 417 810 601
www.flinders.edu.au/clinical-ed
Fresenius Kabi 71
Kira Richards
964 Pacific Highway Pymble NSW 2073 Australia
+61 2 9391 5582
www.fresenius-kabi.com.au
50
Intermed Medical 34
Gemma Keeton
PO Box 33268 Takapuna Auckland 632 New Zealand
+ 64 800 333 444
+64 21 760 112
www.intermed.co.nz
Intersurgical 38 and 39
Jo White
Crane House, Molly Millars Lane Wokingham Berkshire RG412RZ United Kingdom
+44 11 8965 6300
www.intersurgical.com
IX Biopharma Ltd 65
Desiree Chua
350 Orchard Road #16-10 238868 Singapore
+65 6 235 2270
+65 9199 0917
www.ixbiopharma.com
Karl Storz Endoscopy Australia
51
Marianne Moreau
15 Orion Road Lane Cove West NSW 2066 Australia
+61 2 9490 6700
+61 439 412 370
www.karlstorz.com
LifeHealthcare 35
Jessica Lee
Level 8/15 Talavera Road North Ryde NSW 2113 Australia
+61 2 8114 1549
+61 434 318 322
www.lifehealthcare.com.au
Maquet Australia Pty Ltd
3 and 4
Raquel Guarany
9/35 Paringa Road Murarrie Qld 4172 Australia
+61 7 3339 3938
+61 409 754 292
www.getingegroup.com
Masimo Australia Pty Ltd 49
Sarah Murray
Suite 3, Building 7 49 Frenches Forest Road Frenches Forest NSW 2086 Australia
+61 2 9452 4334
+61 401 251 017
www.masimo.com
MDA National Insurance 48
Benjamin Leach
Level 3 100 Dorcas Street Southbank VIC 3006 Australia
1800 011 255
www.mdanational.com.au
Medibroker 58
Aaron Zelman
Suite 1 59 Ross Street Toorak VIC 3142 Australia
+61 3 9828 6200
+61 412 366 643
www.medibroker.com.au
Medical Business Systems
42
Mark Laforest
PO Box R1991 Royal Exchange NSW 1225 Australia
+61 2 4367 2200
+61 419 012 869
www.medicalbusinesssystems.com.au
HCI profiles continued
51
MediTrust 12
Teresa Lambert
Suite 8 32 Silkwood Rise Carrum Downs VIC 3201 Australia
1300 367 540
+61 408 844 210
www.meditrust.com.au
Medtronic 24 and 25
Rick McAbee
97 Waterloo Road North Ryde NSW 2113 Australia
+61 2 9429 3123
+61 42 105 2664
www.medtronic.com/covidien/products
Mercury Medical 8 and 9
Lizette Souder
11300 - 49th Street North Clearwater Florida 33762-4800 US
+01 1800 237 6418
www.mercurymed.com
Mindray 10 and 11
19 Harker Street Burwood VIC 3125 Australia
1800 793 011
[email protected], [email protected]
www.mindray.com
Mölnlycke Healthcare 54
Shane Freeman
Suite 1.01, 10 Tilley Lane Frenchs Forest 2086 NSW
+61 2 8977 2144
+61 447 623 171
www.molnlycke.com.au
MSD 5 and 6
Matt Quinnell
26 Talavera Road Macquarie Park NSW 2113 Australia
+61 414 795 371
www.msd-australia.com.au
Mundipharma Pty Limited 57
Medical Information
Medical Information GPO Box 5214 Sydney NSW 2001 Australia
+61 1800 188 009
www.mundipharma.com.au
Perpetual Private 53
Michelle Gianferrari
Angel Place 123 Pitt Street Sydney NSW 2000 Australia
+61 2 9229 3532
+61 421 446 513
www.perpetul.com.au/medicalspecialists
Pfizer 70
Andrew Endicott
38-42 Wharf Road West Ryde NSW 2114 Australia
+61 2 9850 3333
+61 418 647 019
www.pfizer.com.au
Philips 1
Chris Sargentson
Locked Bag 30 North Ryde NSW 1670 Australia
1800 251 400
www.philips.com.au/healthcare
52
Safer Sleep 50
Paul Campbell
PO Box 159 Albany Village 755 New Zealand
+64 21 271 9455
http://www.safersleep.com
Smiths Medical Australasia
26 and 27
Annabel Ford
Suite 201 10 Norbrik Drive Bella Vista NSW 2153 Australia
+61 2 9634 9200
+61 448 113 566
www.smiths-medical.com
Teleflex Medical Australia & New Zealand
18 and 19
Joanna Reekie
Building B, Level 4 201 Coward Street Mascot NSW 2020 Australia
1300 360 226
+61 400 360 730
www.teleflexmedical.com.au
The Critical Group 33
Kristine Miller
Unit 49 9 Salisbury Road Castle Hill NSW 2154 Australia
+61 2 9899 1755
+61 413 188 565
www.criticalgroup.com.au
USL Medical 61
Peter Gardner
494 Rosebank Road Avondale 1026 Auckland New Zealand
+64 27 259 1928
www.uslmedical.co.nz www.uslmedical.com.au
Verathon 44
Parisa Hesami
Level 13 31 Market Street Sydney NSW 2011 Australia
+61 2 8281 5500
www.verathon.com
Vifor Pharma 69
Anthony Barnetson
Level 8 80 Dorcas Street Southbank NSW 3006 Australia
+61 3 9686 0111
+61 400 697 184
www.viforpharma.com.au
Visitor Information Centre I-site Skycity
72
Chanthara Sinclair
Cnr Victor and Federal Street Auckland 1141 New Zealand
+64 9365 9922
+64 21 277 180
www.intersurgical.com
16th World Congress of Anaesthesiologists
47
WCA2016 c/o MCI Suisse SA
CP 205 75 Rue de Lyon Geneva 1211 Switzerland
+41 2 2339 9597
www.wca2016.com
HCI profiles continued
53
Social programAll social functions require a ticket for admission.
College Ceremony RehearsalSaturday April 30, 201612.30-1pmNew Zealand Room 3A, Skycity Convention Centre
College CeremonyOrator: Rob Hamill
Saturday April 30, 20166-7.30pmASB Theatre, Aotea CentreCost: Inclusive for all registrants and their families. No ticket is required to attend the ceremony however the reception following will be ticketed.Dress: stage party: Black tie and College/Faculty gown or academic dress.Guests: Formal/lounge suit. College/Faculty gown or academic dress is preferred.
College Ceremony Cocktail ReceptionSaturday April 30, 20167.30-11.30pmGreat Hall, Auckland Town Hall Enter via main doors on Queen Street.Cost: Inclusive for ANZCA/FPM full, new Fellow and retired registrants.Additional tickets: $NZ150 per person. $NZ25 per child (3-12 years).Dress: stage party: Black tie and College/Faculty gown or academic dress.New Fellows: College/Faculty gown is required.Guest: Cocktail or dinner suit.
FPM Trainee LuncheonSunday May 1, 2016Noon-1.30pmLimelight 2, Aotea CentreCost: Inclusive for FPM trainee registrants.
HCI ReceptionSunday May 1, 20165-6.30pmExhibition area, Level 3 and 5, Aotea CentreCost: Inclusive for all full, new Fellow, trainee, retired registrants and registered exhibitors.Additional tickets: $NZ65Dress: Smart casual.
Note: 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.
ANZCA Trainee LuncheonMonday May 2, 2016Noon-1.30pmBox Cafe and Bar, Aotea CentreCost: Inclusive for all trainee registrants.
Anaesthesia and Pain Medicine Foundation Cocktail ReceptionMonday May 2, 20165.30-7pmCouncil Chamber, Auckland Town HallCost: $NZ25
Retired Anaesthetists’ LuncheonTuesday May 3, 2016Noon-1.30pmLimelight 1, Aotea CentreCost: Inclusive for all retired registrants.
Join us for a
Great Gatsby
Gala Dinner
Tuesday May 3, 2016 7pm – midnight
Waiheke room 1 and 2 ANZ Viaduct Events Centre
Cost: Inclusive for ANZCA full, new Fellow and trainee registrants.
Additional tickets: $NZ 220Dress to impress
Gala dinner tickets and table allocationsDelegates will be able to purchase additional tickets
onsite until 10.30am Monday May 2.
Delegates are asked to select their table and advise the registration desk before 10.30am Monday May 2.
Delegates who do not select their table will be allocated and surprised on the evening.
54
OA02: The gourmet’s food and wine tour (Waiheke)Sunday May 1, 20168.30am-4.30pm$NZ226 per personTransport: Depart 8.30am from Aotea Centre on coach to the ferry terminal, and return coach will arrive at Aotea Centre at approximately 4.30pm.
Travel by ferry to Waiheke Island and enjoy succulent fresh oysters, award-winning olive oil and other locally-produced specialty foods, accompanied by wines from some of the island’s top boutique vineyards.
OA03: Golf at NZ Open venueMonday May 2, 201610.30am-5pmRoyal Auckland Golf Club$NZ127 per person. This includes light refreshments, transportation and green fee.
Club hire including trundler: $NZ58 Golf cart hire: $NZ46 (you may wish to share the cost with another delegate).Transport: Depart 10.30am from Aotea Centre and return coach will arrive at approximately 5pm.
Join your fellow delegates in a day of golf at the prestigious Royal Auckland Golf Club. The course is widely regarded as one of the top parkland courses in New Zealand and is always immaculately presented.
Note: Please indicate requirement for club hire and transportation when registering.
OA01: America’s Cup Racing on the Waitemata – New Zealand versus Australia match race!Saturday April 30, 201612.30-5pm$NZ190 per personTransport: Please make your own way to the Viaduct Harbour.
Be part of the challenge, New Zealand anaesthetists versus Australian anaesthetists, and earn some bragging rights.
Note: Please wear a light jacket and flat-soled shoes. Please check in for your trip 15 minutes prior to departure. This trip is suitable for children 10 years and over. The experience includes a full safety briefing before departure. Lifejackets are supplied. In wet weather rain jackets will also be provided. This is an adventure activity and not recommended for pregnant women and people with medical conditions.
Unique Auckland experiences
Optional activities are open to delegates, their partners and/or family.
Disclaimer:
All activities are subject to cancellation unless minimum numbers are met.
No shows will receive no refund.
All prices include GST.
OA04: Fine art, food and fashion downtown walking tourMonday May 2, 20169.45am-noon$NZ129 per personMeeting point: Meeting point will be at the Aotea Centre.
Enjoy an introduction to central Auckland on this downtown walking tour with a fine art, food and fashion focus. You will make your way to the beautiful Auckland Art Gallery where we admire both old and new architecture.
OA05: Tempofit runMonday May 2, 20166.45amComplimentaryMeeting point: The meeting point will be Aotea Centre.
The travel distance will be approximately 10km.
Hayden Shearman is the head coach of TempoFit (New Zealand's boot camp for runners) and will guide runners along a beautiful waterside 10km run (with a 5km shorter option if some runners would like to turn around).
OA06: Emerson’s Brewery – beer and food matching with NZ’s godfather of craft beer!Monday May 2, 20165.30pm arrival – session to start at 6pm and run until 8.30pm (indicative only)$NZ110Hosts: Richard Emerson (Founder) and Chris O’Leary (Emerson’s Brewery Manager)Venue: The Culpeper Restaurant (Princes Wharf, Auckland)Transport: Please make your own way.
Inclusions:• A glass of Emerson’s Pilsner
on arrival.• Minimum of five Emerson’s beer
samplers.• A selection of dishes to match from
The Culpeper menu.
Richard Emerson and Chris O’Leary from Emerson’s Brewery of Dunedin will host an evening of beer and food matching of Emerson’s brews (retail products and an unknown treasure or two).
55
Things to do in Auckland
Auckland Whale and Dolphin SafariMake it easy to experience the astonishing wildlife of the beautiful Hauraki Gulf Marine Park. The four-and-a-half-hour marine eco-safari offers guaranteed whale and dolphin viewing year-round, departing daily direct from Auckland.
www.awads.co.nz/
Kelly Tarlton’s SEA LIFE AquariumSee the world’s largest sub-Antarctic penguin colony display, the world’s biggest species of stingray and New Zealand’s largest collection of sharks. Journey through a unique Southern Ocean experience and marvel at our amazing new live jellyfish display and visit the magical Seahorse Kingdom where you’ll find the world’s only display of spiny sea dragons, and much more.
www.kellytarltons.co.nz
Auckland Art Gallery Toi o TamakiEnter between majestic kauri (native tree) columns to explore four floors of exhibitions, seven centuries of art and one of the country’s most iconic buildings. Experience world-class touring exhibitions, immerse yourself in the sights, sounds and atmosphere of traditional and contemporary international works and discover the largest permanent collection of New Zealand art in the heart of Auckland City. Entry is free and open daily from 10am – 5pm.
www.aucklandartgallery.com
Fashion and shopping St HeliersSt Heliers is a seaside suburb of Auckland that is popular among visitors for the beaches, cafés, and views of Rangitoto Island, the distinctive volcanic island in the Hauraki Gulf.
ParnellShopping in Parnell, famed for its boutique style stores, art galleries, cafes and restaurants, known as Auckland’s oldest suburb, radiates charm, character and ambience. If it’s designer décor and galleries that you’re after, then Parnell is an ideal stop. Jewellers, up-market homeware, antiques, art and fashion stores are all prevalent.
NewmarketFirst class shopping is to be found on the Broadway strip and Westfield – the country’s leading shopping centre. Stroll down Nuffield and Teed Streets, where you’ll find the likes of some of New Zealand’s top fashion designers including Karen Walker, Zambesi and Kate Sylvester. Newmarket also has the largest concentration of shoe shops in New Zealand – 24 in fact!
Britomart precinctThe historic Britomart precinct on Auckland’s waterfront is home to some of the city’s best shopping. It’s an inviting network of streets, lanes and open spaces where you can explore and shop at your leisure, browsing Britomart’s treasure trove of fashion, homewares, gift and specialty stores.
The precinct’s beautiful heritage buildings house a collection of quirky fashion boutiques, stocking some of the world’s most exciting and cutting-edge designers as well as the best of fresh and established local design talent.
Ponsonby One of Auckland’s hippest strips, Ponsonby Road is packed with funky fashion stores intertwined with chic cafes, bars and restaurants. Perfect for people watching, Ponsonby is the suburb to visit for some lingering lattes, flat whites, mochaccinos and delectable dining.
Indulge in shopping sprees – a must in this trendy suburb where designers and fashion icons dominate. Local boutiques feature to-die-for clothes and accessories by leading designers. Designer furniture, gift shops and interior and kitchenware shops will tempt you with their alluring window dressings.
Auckland Whale and Dolphin Safari
56
57
World-class diningClooney
The food, like the design, is classic yet undeniably modern. Chef Harris’ cuisine melds the tradition of classical with a contemporary approach to ingredients and technique, used to stimulate the palate and the memory rather than confuse the mind. The flavours are clean, precise and modern; his dishes are continually in progress, reflecting seasonality, inspiration and evolution.
33 Sale Street, Auckland +64 9 358 1702 www.clooney.co.nz
Opening hoursLunch Friday from Noon
Dinner Tuesday to Sunday from 6pm
Closed Monday
French Café
One of New Zealand’s most awarded restaurants. The French Café combines impeccable service from the front of house team who are there to assist you with your wine and food choices, with Executive Chef Simon Wright’s sublime contemporary French food. Classical cuisine blended with a modern approach to ingredients and technique produce flavours that are clean, precise and intense, with an emphasis on fresh local produce and seasonality.
210 Symonds Street, Eden Terrace
+64 9 377 1911 www.thefrenchcafe.co.nz
Opening hoursLunch Friday
Dinner Tuesday to Saturday
Closed Sunday and Monday
Merediths
Merediths is the restaurant of chef Michael Meredith. An intimate restaurant focused on nothing other than providing the complete dining experience – that is, the perfect harmony between remarkable food, superb wine and an inviting hospitality. They offer degustation-only menus. Each menu will take you on a journey where from beginning to end you’ll be wrapped in the Merediths’ experience and shown what they’re all about.
365 Dominion Road, Mt Eden +64 9 623 3140 www.merediths.co.nz
Opening hoursLunch Friday noon to 3.30pm
Dinner Tuesday to Thursday from 6.30pm
Closed Sunday and Monday
Sidart
The restaurant is intimate and cosy with stunning views of Auckland City, spreading from Devonport to Mount Eden, with the Sky Tower as the centre point. Chef Sid changes his menu monthly to showcase his continuous interest and passion in his art, offering the first change on the first Tuesday of the month. Every Tuesday within that month, the dishes evolve to show refinement of skill and completeness. The wine list is focused on being complementary with the style of Chef Sid’s cuisine. Predominantly NZ wine focused, with showings of interesting styles worldwide.
Three Lamps Plaza, Level 1/283 Ponsonby Road, Ponsonby
+64 9 360 2122 www.sidart.co.nz
Opening hoursLunch Friday
Dinner Tuesday to Saturday
Closed Sunday and Monday
The Sugar Club
Located on Level 53 of the Sky Tower, with breathtaking views across Auckland. The menu is based around small seasonal plates packed full of flavour. The Sugar Club sources the finest produce from around New Zealand and mixes it up with flavours from around the world. They call it “fusion cuisine” – their guests call it delicious. The menu is made up of entrée sized dishes, encouraging you to order and taste a wider range of flavours and ingredients than you might otherwise experience. They also offer a seven course chef’s degustation menu, designed to be enjoyed by the whole table and recommend adding selected wine matches. A vegetarian menu is also available on request.
Level 53, Sky Tower Corner of Federal and Victoria streets, Auckland
+64 9 363 6365 www.skycityauckland.co.nz/ restaurants/the-sugar-club/
Opening hoursLunch Wednesday to Sunday
Noon to 2.30pmDinner Daily 5.30 to 9.30pm
Bar Daily from 5pm until late
Useful contacts
Emergency number (Ambulance/Fire/Police)
111
Registration desk – Skycity Convention Centre
+ 64 9 363 7090
Registration desk – Aotea Centre
+ 64 9 374 7509
Auckland airport +64 9 275 0789
Flight information https://www.aucklandairport.
co.nz/FlightInformation/ArrivalsAndDepartures.aspx
Meeting venues
Aotea Centre50 Mayoral Drive, Auckland
Auckland Town HallQueen Street, Auckland
Skycity Convention Centre88 Federal Street, Auckland
ANZCA registration secretariatWaldronSmith Management
119 Buckhurst Street South Melbourne VIC 3205
+61 3 9645 6311
ANZCA ASM 2016 secretariat630 St Kilda Road Melbourne VIC 3004
+61 3 9510 6229
Accommodation
Crowne Plaza Auckland128 Albert Street, Auckland
+64 9302 1111
Skycity Grand Hotel Auckland90 Federal Street, Auckland
+64 9 363 7000
Skycity Hotel AucklandCorner Federal and Victoria Streets, Auckland
+64 9 363 6000
Rydges Auckland59 Federal Street, corner of Kingston Street, Central City, Auckland
+64 9 375 5900
Heritage Auckland35 Hobson Street, Auckland
+64 9 379 8553
CityLife Auckland171 Queen Street, Auckland
+64 9 379 9222
Langham Hotel Auckland83 Symonds Street, Auckland
+64 9 379 5132
Pullman Auckland HotelCorner Princes Street and Waterloo Quadrant, Auckland
+64 9 353 1000
Sofitel AucklandViaduct Harbour 21 Viaduct Harbour Avenue, Auckland
+64 9 909 9000
Registration desk
Skycity Convention CentreThe registration desk is located on level 4 and will be open during the following times:
Saturday April 30, 20167am-3.30pm
Delegates that are registered to attend workshops will collect their registration packs from here. All other delegates will need to collect their registration packs from Aotea Centre.
Aotea CentreThe registration desk is located within the Owens Foyer on level 2 and will be open during the following times:
Saturday April 30, 201610am-5.30pm
Sunday May 1, 20167am-5pm
Monday May 2, 20167am-5pm
Tuesday May 3, 20167am-5pm
Wednesday May 4, 20168am-3.30pm
Information desk
ANZCA and FPM Skycity Convention CentreThe information desk will be open at the following time:
Saturday April 30, 20167am-3.30pm
Aotea CentreThe information desk is located in the Owens Foyer. Please direct any questions relating to the College or the College Ceremony to ANZCA staff.
The information desk will be open at the following times:
Saturday April 30, 201610am-5.30pm
Sunday May 1, 20167am-5pm
Monday May 2, 20167am-5pm
Tuesday May 3, 20167am-5pm
Wednesday May 4, 20168am-3.30pm
Meeting information
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Speaker Support CentreThe Speaker Support Centre will be available for ASM presenters while on site at the Aotea 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 the Goodman Fielder room at the Aotea Centre and will be open at the following times:
Saturday April 30, 20164-6pm
Sunday May 1, 20167.15am-5pm
Monday May 2, 20166.30am-5.30pm
Tuesday May 3, 20166.30am-5.30pm
Wednesday May 4, 20168am-3.30pm
ANZCA loungeFor delegate convenience, ANZCA and FPM staff will be available at the ANZCA lounge to assist with any College related questions.
CateringCatering breaks and lunches for workshop participants on Saturday April 30 will be served on level four at the Skycity Convention Centre.
All catering breaks and lunches on Sunday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday will be served among the HCI exhibition in the Air New Zealand foyer and ANZ foyer, Aotea Centre.
CommunicationAll communication with registered delegates will be by email wherever an email address is provided. If you register and do not receive confirmation by email please contact the meeting secretariat by phone on +61 3 9510 6299 or email [email protected].
CPD programANZCA members will automatically have their attendance accredited to their CPD portfolio following the ASM, in June 2016. Non ANZCA CPD participants please see the registration desk to request an electronic certificate of attendance.
DressMeeting sessions: Smart casual.HCI Reception: Smart casual.College Ceremony and Cocktail Reception (stage party): Black tie and College/Faculty gown or academic dress.College Ceremony and Cocktail Reception (guests): Formal/lounge suit. College/Faculty gown or academic dress is optional.Gala Dinner: Dress to impress.
Duplication and recordingPhotography, audiotaping, video recording, digital taping or any other form of duplication is strictly prohibited in the sessions and ePoster areas.
Eposter displaysePosters are displayed in the HCI exhibition area from Sunday to Wednesday. Please note that all ePoster sessions will be moderated and session times can be found on pages 26 and 27 of this handbook.
Gala dinner tickets and table allocationsDelegates will be able to purchase additional tickets onsite until 10.30am Monday May 2.
Delegates are asked to select their table and advise the registration desk by 10.30am Monday May 2. Delegates who do not select their table will be allocated and surprised on the evening.
Mobile phonesDelegates are requested to use mobile phones with consideration for others. Please be sure to switch off during all sessions.
Name badgeAll 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.
Personal propertyPlease 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.
SatchelsIn an attempt to reduce carbon footprints, the organising committee have chosen reusable bags. You may wish to return your bag at the end of the conference to the registration desk to be recycled and offered to a charity. We would like to thank Dr Cath Purdy (Regional Organising Committee Social Media Representative) for the designs printed on the satchels.
Smoking policyThe New Zealand Government imposes a strict no smoking policy in venues, restaurants, bars and shopping centres. The Aotea Centre and Skycity Convention Centre are smoke-free facilities. No indoor smoking areas are provided.
Special dietary requirementsIf you have advised the meeting secretariat of special dietary requirements, please speak to a member of the Skycity or Aotea 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.
TicketingDelegates 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.
Wi-FiComplimentary wireless interest is available for the meeting delegates.
To log on please enter the following information:
SSID: ANZCA_ASM
Password: Auckland2016
DisclosureThe scientific committee is committed to providing an unbiased, balanced and objective educational and scientific program.
DisclaimerANZCA Annual Scientific Meeting 2016 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 2016 or related events.
All details contained in this handbook are correct at the time of printing.
ANZCA ASM 2016 secretariat
@ANZCA #ASM16NZ
www.asm.anzca.edu.au
+61 3 9510 6229
Transport from the airportThe Auckland International Airport is situated approximately 25 kilometres from central Auckland. Getting to and from Auckland can be achieved by bus or taxi.
Taxis and shuttlesTaxi and shuttle ranks are located outside the arrivals door at the international terminal and outside the Jetstar forecourt at the domestic terminal. Indicative fares from the airport into the city are between $NZ75 and $NZ90 one way for a taxi and shuttles are $NZ33 for one person plus $NZ8 for each extra person travelling together in the same group.
BusesAirbus Express is the fastest way to travel to the city. The service operates 24 hours a day with buses departing every ten minutes on weekdays between 7am and 7pm and every fifteen minutes on weekends between 6am and 7pm. Evening and overnight departures run every 20-30 minutes. Travel time is approximately 45 minutes to an hour. Please allow extra time during peak times. Tickets are $NZ16 one way and available online. For more information please visit www.airbus.co.nz.
Public transport
Britomart Transport Centre – rail, buses and ferryThe Britomart Transport Centre is the main city rail and bus terminal. It links the city centre with outer suburbs. For more information visit www.maxx.co.nz.
Ferries depart from the Downtown Ferry Terminal that is located opposite the Britomart Transport Centre.
ParkingDirect access to the Aotea Centre can be made through the Civic Car Park. Access to the Civic Car Park is via Grey’s Avenue or Mayoral Drive, next to the Herald Theatre. There are also a number of other car parks in close proximity to the venue. For further information on locations, rates and times please visit Auckland transport’s parking page at www.at.govt.nz/driving-parking/parking-in-auckland/victoria-st-car-park/.
Intention to photographPlease be advised that photographs may be taken and reproduced by the event organisers during the meeting.
General information
Photography acknowledgementsFront cover images:
The Lab Image Library and Chris McLennan.
Back cover images: The Lab Image Library, Chris McLennan and Luke Thurley.
Contributing photographers: Auckland Tourism and Events and Economic Development Limited, Julian Apse, Explore Group Limited, Blaine Harrington, Matt Taylor, Roger Wandless and Auckland Tourism and Events and Economic Development Limited.
We would like to thank Dr Cath Purdy from the ROC for her contribution of artwork that has been printed on your delegate satchel.
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Think BigANZCA ASM 2017
May 12-16 Brisbane
: asm.anzca.edu.au: [email protected]: @ANZCA #ASM16NZ