Australian health review : a publication of the Australian Hospital Association
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Australian medical speciality colleges have adapted and integrated the CanMEDS Physician Competency Framework into their training programs. The role as manager is one of the competencies and is presently thought to receive little attention during training. The objective of our study was to investigate the perceptions of Australian junior doctors regarding their management skills and their perceived need for management education. ⋯ The junior doctors of Victoria, Australia perceived their knowledge on medical management as moderate. The results of this study showed that there is a perceived need among junior doctors for more management training. This need seems to confirm that management skills are thought to be valuable in medical practice. Our study also suggests that before the development of specific interventions, there is a need for a gap analysis between the perceived and actual management skills desired in medical residents. The attention paid to the role 'as manager' should therefore be embedded in training of all junior doctors.
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Medical photography illustrates what people would prefer to keep private, is practiced when people are vulnerable, and has the power to freeze a moment in time. Given it is a sensitive area of health, lawful and ethical practice is paramount. This paper recognises and seeks to clarify the possibility of widespread clinician-taken medical photography in a tertiary hospital in northern Australia, examining the legal and ethical implications of this practice. ⋯ Non-compliance with written consent requirements articulated in policy was endemic, with most clinicians surveyed obtaining only verbal consent. Labeling, storage, copyright and cultural issues were generally misunderstood, with a significant number of clinicians risking the security of patient information by storing images on personal devices. If this tertiary hospital does not develop a clinical photography action plan to address staff lack of knowledge, and noncompliance with policy and mobile phone use, patients' data is at risk of being distributed into the public domain where unauthorised publication may cause psychological harm and have legal ramifications for th hospital, its patients, and staff.