2022 Program

Program

Tuesday 4 October

15:00 – 20:00 REGISTRATION OPEN 
18:00 – 20:00 Welcome Function | Mezzanine Level, Hilton Hotel

Welcome to the 2022 CRANAplus Conference! The Welcome Reception is your first social opportunity to catch up with your interstate colleagues and sponsors and exhibitors of the Conference. The Welcome also provides a great opportunity to meet delegates who are attending the Conference for the first time.

Join us as we announce the Gayle Woodford Memorial Scholarship recipient, inaugurate new CRANAplus Fellows, and for the presentation of graduates from any award course by Flinders University.

Wednesday 5 October

07:30 – 16:30 REGISTRATION OPEN | TRADE EXHIBITION
08:30 – 09:15 Conference Opening

Welcome to Country
Senior Kaurna Man, Mickey Kumatpi O’Brien

Welcome to Delegates
09:15 – 10:25 Keynote Speaker

Dr Norman Swan
Award-winning broadcaster, journalist and commentator 

Award-winning broadcaster, journalist and commentator Dr. Norman Swan is one of Australia’s best known health personalities. He hosts the Health Report and the Coronacast Podcast, reports for Four Corners, presents on ABC TV’s the Drum and ABC NewsRadio, co-founded Tonic Health Media, edits The Choice Health Reader, and corresponds for multiple international medical journals. Trained in Medicine and Paediatrics, Dr. Swan will be discussing social determinants of health, lessons learned from the pandemic, and the future of remote health.

10:25 – 10:50 Morning Tea
10:50 – 11:30 Invited Speaker

Adjunct Prof Shelley Nowlan
Deputy National Rural Health Commissioner & Chief Nursing and Midwifery Officer, Queensland Health

Adj. Prof. Shelley Nowlan, has over 35 years of experience as an RN. Widely recognised for her leadership and contributions to nursing, her professional and industry advice on nursing and midwifery matters across Queensland and rural Australia helps to drive improved access to rural health services and a sustainable workforce that can meet demand. She will be delivering the opening address.

11:30 – 12:05 Invited Speaker

Professor Roianne West
CEO of CATSINaM

Kalkadoon and Djaku-nde woman, Roianne West, CEO of CATSINaM, has led a life of extraordinary commitment to Indigenous Health. An RN who has also completed a Masters of Mental Health Nursing and a PhD developing a model of excellence for increasing Indigenous Nurses in Australia, Roianne was Australia’s first Nursing Director at a tertiary hospital with a dedicated portfolio of Indigenous health, Australia’s first Professor of Indigenous Health, and inaugural Dean of First Peoples Health at Griffith University.

12:05 – 12:15 Q&A | Morning Wrap Up
12:15 – 13:00 Lunch
13:00 – 13:05 Introduction to Abstract Presenters
13:05 – 13:20 Katie Pennington
Edith Cowan University
What we know and what we don’t. Findings from the Registered Nurses in very remote Australia, medicines and the law project– So what? And what next?
13:20 – 13:35 Sonita Giudice
Queensland Health
Co-design of maternity services to improve care and outcomes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women and babies – Queensland’s Growing Deadly Families Strategy
13:35 – 13:50 Kylie McCullough
Edith Cowan University
Telling the World what RANs already know using research to influence change
13:50 – 14:05 Abstract Q&A
14:05 – 14:50 Invited Speaker

Dr Simon Quilty
Medical Advisor, Purple House

Simon is a general physician who has worked in remote NT since 2001, commenced specialist services in Katherine Hospital in 2012, and has been working in Alice Springs Hospital since 2020 as a senior staff specialist. With a background in engineering and public health before commencing his medical career, he has unique perspectives on determinants of poor health outcomes in the communities he has worked across in northern Australia. He works with communities to conduct action research that identifies solutions to areas of inequity and broader threats, and his work is now focused entirely on understanding and mitigating the impact of heat and climate change in the tropical north of Australia.

14:50 – 15:00 Q&A | Afternoon Wrap Up
15:00 – 15:25 Afternoon Break
15:25 – 16:30 Workshop – Nurse Practitioner 10 Year Plan
Allison Thomas & Lucy Firth, Department of Health and Aged Care
16:30 – 18:30 Flinders University Consultation (optional)
Ballroom, BC
The College of Medicine and Public Health at Flinders University is reviewing its Remote Health Practice Courses, which have provided education and training for remote health professionals for over 20 years. The College is hoping that CRANAplus members attending the conference will participate as valued members of the stakeholder group. The outcomes of this review will help the College determine how its educational program serves industry needs.All delegates are welcome and are encouraged to RSVP via email to cmph.deanED@flinders.edu.au by Monday 26 September.

Thursday 6 October

08:00 – 16:30 REGISTRATION OPEN | TRADE EXHIBITION
08:30 – 08:50 Welcome to Day 2
Address from the Hon Emma McBride MP
Assistant Minister for Mental Health and Suicide Prevention/ Assistant Minister for Rural and Regional Health
08:50 – 09:20 Hotspot Presentation Roundtable
Sandra Gilbert
, Rural Support Service, Below the surface: Exploration of factors that impact on effectiveness of the South Australian Regional Enrolled Nursing Cadet Program
Anne Garrahy
, Queensland Helath, Improving access to end of life care planning support in rural and remote Queensland
Kim Packham, Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care, Improving health care in primary and community settings through new nationally-consistent, patient-centred safety and quality standards.
Jodie Turvey, Queensland Health, Establishing a state-wide rural and remote generalist nurse career pathway for registered nurses
Dalya Holowinksi, Murrumbidgee Local Health District, Creating access and effective education in our current staffing crisis
09:20 – 10:20 Invited Speaker

Professor Sue Kildea
CRANAplus Fellow and Professor of Midwifery and Co-Director of the Molly Wardaguga Research Centre, CDU

Prof. Sue Kildea is an internationally recognised midwifery leader, known for her advocacy for rural and remote health and for bringing birthing services to Aboriginal and Torres Strait control. A RN/RM with clinical, management, policy, education and research experience, Prof. Kildea has been using research in the maternity field to drive social change since the mid-90s. She will be discussing birthing on country/midwifery services in remote Australia.

10:20 – 10:45 Morning Tea & Poster Session
10:45 – 11:20 Invited Speaker

Leeona West
Registered Nurse, North West Hospital and Health Service. Leeona is a proud Kalkadoon and Djunke woman and along with her twin sister and her brother she graduated from Deakin University in 2001 with a Batchelor of Nursing degree.  Leeona has experience working in rural and remote hospitals, aged care facilities, primary health care centres and Aboriginal community controlled health services.  Leeona has worked across Cape York and the north-west including the Gulf of Carpentaria where she was the DON of Gununa Hospital (Mornington Island).  Balancing her cultural responsibilities with her clinical skills, systems approach and good governance practice has enhanced her ability as a community leader.
11:20 – 11:30 Introduction of Abstract Presenters
 11:30 – 11:45 Jessica Gysin-Webster
OutsideIn Group
Kangaroo Island Health Service Phoenix Project – An innovative multi-disciplinary approach to fostering the wellbeing of a rural and remote health care service
 11:45 – 12:00 Kellie Kerin
AMSANT
Be Influenced or be the Influencer – (Indigenous Transgenerational Trauma as a Lived Experience)
12:00 – 12:15 Geoffrey Angeles
One Disease
Having a positive impact on that itch
12:15 – 12:30 Abstract Q&A
12:30 – 13:15 Lunch
13:15 – 13:50 Invited Speaker

Dr Rosemary Wyber & Vicki Wade
Head of Strategy for END RHD, Senior Adjunct Research Fellow at the University of WA, and PhD Student with the Office of the Chief Scientist at The George Institute for Global Health

Dr. Wyber’s PhD focus is on developing an ‘endgame’ for rheumatic heart disease in Australia. Dr. Wyber completed her medical degree in New Zealand, her Masters of Public Health at the Harvard School of Public Health, and her General Practice training in Aboriginal Community Controlled Clinics in the NT.

13:50 – 13:55 Introduction of Abstract Presenters
13:55 – 14:10 Jessie Anderson
Flinders University
Fostering the remote health workforce: How undergraduate placements and work intention impacts the choice of remote practice in early career nursing and allied health professionals.
14:10 – 14:25 Kristy Hill
CRANAplus
Delivering support in a changing landscape
14:25 – 14:30 Abstract Q&A
14:30 – 14:55 Afternoon Tea
14:55 – 15:45 Panel Presentation – Remote Area Nursing Into the Future
Chair: Katherine Isbister, CEO CRANAplus
Sabina Knight, Roianne West, Tess Ivanhoe, Fiona Wake
15:45 – 16:00 Conference Close 
18:00 – 23:00 CRANAplus Conference Gala Dinner | Ballroom, Hilton Hotel

Join us at the 39th CRANAplus Gala Conference Dinner. The dinner is your chance to celebrate and catch-up with colleagues and friends, new and old.

The theme for the 2022 Gala Dinner is “ALL THAT SPARKLES“. We invite you to dress up or wear something that sparkles. With our focus on sustainability, we challenge you to not buy anything new. Rummage through your wardrobe or borrow from a friend and embrace the theme with your sparkling accessories! 


Inclusive for full registrations however bookings are essential for planning purposes.  Book during the registration process.  Additional tickets may be purchased by guests, exhibitors and day registrations.