06.04.2014 Views

DOWNLOAD GP CME 2010 PROCEEDINGS BOOKLET (18mb PDF)

DOWNLOAD GP CME 2010 PROCEEDINGS BOOKLET (18mb PDF)

DOWNLOAD GP CME 2010 PROCEEDINGS BOOKLET (18mb PDF)

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

Speakers Biographies<br />

Dr Erica Whineray Kelly<br />

Biographies & Sessions<br />

43<br />

Erica is a graduate of the Otago School of Medicine, following which she completed her Fellowship in<br />

general surgery in New Zealand, also working at the Tertiary Level Breast Cancer Clinic at St Vincent’s<br />

University Hospital, in Dublin with visits to Milan to the European Institute of Oncology. Erica also<br />

completed a two-year oncoplastic Fellowship in Auckland, the first of its type in Australasia.<br />

Now a breast surgeon living on Auckland’s North Shore, Erica works as a consultant breast surgeon<br />

for Auckland Breast Centre, Breast Screening Waitemata Northland and as a surgical auditor for the<br />

National Breast Screening Programme.<br />

Erica is an active member of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons Breast Section, is on the<br />

Executive of the Auckland Breast Cancer Study Group, and with a special interest in lobular neoplasia,<br />

has published and presented in her field. Erica is married with two children.<br />

Breast Cancer 101<br />

Friday, 10 June 2011 Start 2:00pm Duration: 25mins Baytrust Forum<br />

Breast Surgery Update - Concurrent Breakout Session Repeated<br />

Saturday, 11 June 2011 Start 8:30am Duration: 50mins Opus<br />

Start 9:25am Duration: 50mins Opus<br />

Diagnosis of Breast Cancer - Concurrent Workshop Session Repeated<br />

Saturday, 11 June 2011 Start 11:00am Duration: 55mins Sovereign<br />

Start 12:05pm Duration: 55mins Sovereign<br />

Dr Keith Laubscher<br />

Keith is a Pain Specialist with a particular interest in Musculoskeletal Pain Management. He is Fellow of<br />

the Australasian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists and Fellow of The Australasian College of<br />

Musculoskeletal Medicine, and member of The New Zealand Pain Society and International Association<br />

for the Study of Pain. He has been the Director of PainCare, a private clinic in Auckland with a satellite<br />

clinic Hamilton since 1997. His principal interest is in Interventional Pain Management.<br />

Musculoskeletal Medicine - Pre-conference Workshop Repeated<br />

(with Dr Ian Wallbridge & Dr Rick Bernau)<br />

Thursday, 09 June 2011 Start 8:30am Duration: 120mins Works<br />

Start 11:00am Duration: 120mins Works<br />

Dr Brett Mann<br />

Brett has been in general practice at Ilam Medical Centre in Christchurch since 1986. He is a medical<br />

educator in the <strong>GP</strong> registrar programme and has been an examiner for the RNZC<strong>GP</strong>. Over the last<br />

15 years he has adapted and added to Dr Brian Broom’s seminal work on somatisation developing<br />

an approach relevant to the types of patients presenting in general practice and an approach for the<br />

standard general practice consultation.<br />

Brett has provided many seminars for general practitioners on somatisation including the M<strong>GP</strong> programme<br />

in Dunedin in 2008 and <strong>2010</strong>, the General Practice Medical Education conference <strong>2010</strong>, and the rural<br />

<strong>GP</strong> conference. These presentations have been very well received. He has had preliminary input into<br />

undergraduate education at Otago medical school regarding somatisation and has provided website<br />

material on somatisation for the national <strong>GP</strong>EP2 programme.<br />

Managing Somatisation in <strong>GP</strong> - Pre-Conference Workshop Repeated<br />

Thursday, 09 June 2011 Start 2:00pm Duration: 120mins Picasso<br />

Start 4:30pm Duration: 120mins Picasso<br />

09-12 June 2011 | Energy Events Centre | Rotorua

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!