As COVID-19 and its effects continue to impact our communities, it’s important to remember that support is available. This support comes in many forms, including webinar events hosted by Healthy North Coast.
With webinar recordings now available, we invite you to catch up on two important webinars we held in August. The first webinar explored clinical workplace stress and the warning signs of burnout and compassion fatigue. The second explored practical strategies for dealing with difficult interactions.
Both webinar recordings are now available for on-demand view.
Coping with the Realities of Clinical Workplace Stress
Recorded 26 August 2021
Presented by: Dr Basia Radlinska, Clinical Psychologist and Clinical Lead, headspace Coffs Harbour
Length: 90 minutes
Basia covered topics such as:
- the professional and personal stressors that may impact resilience in the workplace
- the impact of toxic stress on physical and mental health
- the warning signs of compassion fatigue and burnout
- practical and effective strategies to reduce burnout and build resilience.
‘The presentation by Basia was very professional but also empathetically presented on the back of a pretty tricky two years,’ said Emma Mulvihill, an occupational therapist who attended the live webinar.
‘We’ve had fires, floods, COVID, etc, plus normal compassion in our workplaces. Basia’s presentation had videos and practical ideas and her presentation, combined with the chat, gave reassurance that other health professionals have the same feelings.’
Working with Challenging Clients
Recorded 31 August 2021
Presented by: Dr David Cooper, Specialist Emergency Physician, Medical Indemnity Protection Society
Length: 60 minutes
David covered topics such as:
- what makes a client professionally challenging
- the causes of difficult interactions
- strategies to navigate difficult interactions
- the importance of debriefing and self-care following incidences involving challenging behaviour.
‘David validated my teaching approach to communication in the health industry,’ said Russell Kilpatrick, a teacher at TAFE NSW Faculty of Health Sciences who attended the live webinar.
‘It’s an area that students often underestimate the importance of. David was a great presenter, and the importance of his learning is backed by his knowledge as an emergency physician and healthcare executive specialising in medical law.’
Coming up
If you’d like to see more Healthy North Coast webinars, please join us on Tuesday 14 September from 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm for STIs & HIV: Everyone’s Business. This webinar will be particularly relevant to GPs, GP registrars and practice nurses. Have a pen ready, because we’ll be giving you helpful information to enhance your communication skills when taking a sexual health history.
Join live to receive 4 CPD points.
What we’ll cover
- The impact that syphilis and antimicrobial resistant gonorrhoea are having on our local and wider community and the ways in which we can minimise the risk of these STIs and blood-borne viruses.
- What resources are at our disposal to help with contact tracing and following best practice guidelines when managing STIs & BBVs.
- Use of PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis) in general practice and its effective minimisation of HIV transmission.
Learning outcomes
- Apply effective communication skills when taking a sexual health history.
- Explain behaviours that increase the risk of STIs and BBVs with patients as part of routine history taking.
- Appraise the impact of syphilis on the local community and apply effective practice procedures as guided by the Australian STI Management Guidelines.
- Appraise the impact of antimicrobial resistant gonorrhoea on the local community and utilise the Australian STI Management Guidelines to inform best practice for antimicrobial stewardship.
- Access digital resources to support GPs in provision of sexual health care.
- Utilise PrEP in general practice.

