Last month, Healthy North Coast presented their ‘Clinical Societies’ model at the Essential Health Summit in Adelaide.
The Summit brought together delegates from the Australian Primary Health Care Nurses Association (APNA) and the Australasian Society of Lifestyle Medicine (ASLM).
Five PHNs were invited to the Summit to present innovative models of collaboration and building of capacity in the health workforce.
Nigel Cronin, Associate Director Primary Care Impact Programs, led the presentation, showcasing Healthy North Coast’s Clinical Society model.
What is the clinical society model?
In 2021, local Clinical Societies were set up in eight different areas within the Healthy North Coast footprint: Tweed Valley, Ballina-Byron, Lismore-Kyogle-Casino, Clarence Valley, Coffs Harbour-Bellingen, Nambucca-Macksville, Kempsey-Macleay and Port Macquarie-Hastings.
This allowed for health professionals to come together each quarter for education, dinner, and networking with the common aim of integrating services and systems and improving experiences and outcomes for patients in their community.
Each area was comprised of ‘clinical champions’ – a small committee that helped develop localised topics and speakers.
The impact
Over time, the Clinical Societies have grown in membership. At last count, there are now over 2,250 active members across the North Coast.
There is strong representation across a range of primary health care disciplines, including general practice, allied health, pharmacy, nursing, aged care, Aboriginal health, dieticians, practice managers and more.
Overall satisfaction ratings for the Clinical Societies are sitting within the 90% range, indicating the quality of speakers, content, learning outcomes and venues.
What’s coming up
There is a series of online Clinical Society events running from 14-28 August 2024 around the topic of Healthy Ageing. In November, there will be an in-person series on the topic of First 2,000 Days.
For more info or to join your local Clinical Society, head to our webpage.