ASM 2023 highlights
2023 ANZCA ASM highlights

ASM co-convenors Dr Tanya Selak and Dr Shanel Cameron final thoughts

Dr Jessica Lim and Dr Ben Moran - ELC and ePosters

Associate Professor Paul Lee-Archer and Dr Sarah Bowman on the 2024 Brisbane ASM

Dr Priya Shanmuganathan talks to A/Prof Kristen Schreiber

Gilbert Brown Prize Session Chair A/Prof Matt Doane speaks with Dr Andrew Wilson

ASM Visiting Speaker Professor Idit Matot talks to Dr Lexi Buchanan

Dr Patrick Tan talks to Professor Jamie Sleigh

2023 ANZCA College Ceremony Oration

Dr Scott Ma and Dr Archana Shrivathsa talk sustainability
2023 ASM hot takes
ASM hot takes: A/Prof Deborah Wilson and Dr Rod Mitchell discuss the DRGA

ASM hot takes: A/Prof Stefan Dieleman and Dr Amy Lawrence

Dr Tanya Selak and Dr Cameron Dunn talk trainee sessions

Professor Nuala Lucas talks to Dr Nilru Vitharana FANZCA

Dr Vanessa Beavis and Dr Sean McManus discuss the new ANZCA DipPOM

ASM Day 1 highlights: The hot take from co-convenors Dr Tanya Salek and Dr Shanel Cameron

Workshop Day hot take with Dr Tanya Salek and Dr Shanel Cameron

Dr Andrea Binks and Dr Time Cooper - ASM workshops

Dr Matt Rucklidge and Professor Nuala Lucas - 2023 Obstetric Anaesthesia SIG meeting

Dr Matt Rucklidge and Dr Jane Brown highlights - 2023 Obstetric SIG meeting

ANZCA acknowledges the traditional custodians of the land on which the New Zealand International Convention Centre is located, where the 2026 ANZCA ASM will be held. We also acknowledge the traditional custodians of country throughout Australia and recognise their unique cultural and spiritual relationships to the land, waters and seas and their rich contribution to society, and pay our respects to ancestors and elders, past, present and emerging.
ANZCA recognises Te Tiriti o Waitangi as a foundational document that shapes the historical and cultural landscape of Aotearoa New Zealand and that informs our approach to medical education, research, and community engagement Tangata Whenua.
ANZCA acknowledges and respects Māori as the Tangata Whenua of Aotearoa and is committed to upholding the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi, fostering the college’s relationship with Māori, supporting Māori fellows and trainees, and striving to improve the health of Māori.
The college recognises the special relationship between the Pacific peoples of New Zealand, Australia and the Pacific, and is committed to supporting those fellows and trainees of ANZCA, and improving the health of Pacific peoples.
ANZCA recognises Te Tiriti o Waitangi as a foundational document that shapes the historical and cultural landscape of Aotearoa New Zealand and that informs our approach to medical education, research, and community engagement Tangata Whenua.
ANZCA acknowledges and respects Māori as the Tangata Whenua of Aotearoa and is committed to upholding the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi, fostering the college’s relationship with Māori, supporting Māori fellows and trainees, and striving to improve the health of Māori.
The college recognises the special relationship between the Pacific peoples of New Zealand, Australia and the Pacific, and is committed to supporting those fellows and trainees of ANZCA, and improving the health of Pacific peoples.