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| | Executive Director's Message | | Learning about life on the other side | | Keeping in touch with colleagues; to learn, network and understand first-hand what’s going on in the world is important to Australian health professionals. This year, I went to just one meeting in Germany before it became clear that travel was ill-advised. Within hours, my forward schedule bore no resemblance to previous years and nor will it for the foreseeable future. But COVID-19 has not halted information sharing; it has accelerated it on a massive scale... |
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| | Reassuring patients during COVID-19 | | Cancer care is safe | | Feedback in the cancer community is indicating that patients are worried about presenting to hospitals and GPs are uncertain about referrals. A campaign to build confidence in the community and reassure patients that cancer care is safe - and very important.
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| | COVID-19 - a lasting telehealth legacy for Victorian cancer care | | Telehealth holds up under scrutiny | | Telehealth has become a vital tool for the care and safety of cancer patients during COVID-19 and has highlighted a variety of sustainable opportunities for the future provision of cancer services in Victoria. Latest data derived from the Victorian COVID-19 Cancer Network’s (VCCN) Telehealth Expert Group chaired by Associate Professor Zee Wan Wong, Director of Oncology at Peninsula Health, indicates that 100 percent of Victoria’s health services are now using telehealth to maintain appropriate care for cancer patients. |
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| | | | | | 11 MAY 2020 MONDAY LUNCH LIVE STREAM | ADOPTING THE TELETRIALS MODEL FOR SAFE DELIVERY |
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| | | | 15 MAY 2020 COVID-19 AND CANCER IN VICTORIA: | ENHANCING COMMUNICATION SKILLS FOR TELEHEALTH DELIVERY |
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| | | | 20 MAY 2020 VCCC GRAND ROUND BREAST CANCER | FEATURING PAUL BEAVIS, GROUP LEADER CANCER RESEARCH PETER MACCALLUM CANCER CENTRE |
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| | | | 25 MAY 2020, FOUR WEEK, PART-TIME MASSIVE OPEN ONLINE COURSE | CANCER SURVIVORSHIP FOR PRIMARY CARE PRACTITIONERS |
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| | University of Melbourne Centre for Cancer Research | | WEBINAR | Central venous access devices and cancer care: what we know but don’t implement | | Venous access is critical to the efficient and effective delivery of many aspects of care for 13,000 adult Australians diagnosed with a haematological malignancy each year. Evidence indicates that between 15-66% of Central Venous Access Devices (CVADs) fail prematurely, with cancer patients having the highest rates of CVAD failures. This study sets out to explore and explain why CVADs fail; what proportion of CVADs fail due to complications; why CVAD outcome data is not routinely collected and reported in Victoria; and why evidence from vascular access research is not translated and implemented in practice to improve patient outcomes and system costs. |
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| | | | 861 Professional development event attendees. |
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| | | 4 Professional development events. |
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| Victorian Comprehensive Cancer Centre members | |
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© 2017 Victorian Comprehensive Cancer Centre Pty Ltd. |
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