Registrar/Advanced Trainee Central Adelaide Palliative Care Service Location
Central Adelaide Palliative Care Service, Adelaide, South Australia
Description
The Registrar/Advanced Trainee role at the Central Adelaide Palliative Care Service offers a unique opportunity to be part of a dynamic, patient-focused environment within South Australia's leading health networks. As a key member of the CAPCS team, you will play an essential role in providing high-quality consultation and liaison services, including in-hospital care at the Royal Adelaide Hospital and The Queen Elizabeth Hospital, as well as supporting patients in their homes and residential aged care facilities. This position offers excellent exposure to a variety of complex cases, helping to shape the delivery of compassionate care for patients with palliative needs across both metropolitan and regional South Australia.
In this rewarding role, you'll work alongside a multidisciplinary team of experts, gaining invaluable clinical experience while contributing to the broader health service reforms within the Local Health Networks (LHNs). The position supports ongoing professional development, with opportunities for education and research, as well as participation in initiatives that promote community health and chronic disease management. The role provides a clear pathway for career progression, and the ability to work in a clinically-led, patient-focused service division ensures that your contributions will have a meaningful impact on the care delivered throughout the region.
Apply Apply via: careers.pageuppeople.com
Contact: Tracy Kroon, Business Consultant, Specialty Medicine 2 Phone: +61 8 8222 6582 E-mail:
Applications close Dec 17, 2024, 23:59 PM
We acknowledge and pay respect to the Traditional Custodians and Elders — past, present and emerging — of the lands and waters on which RACP members and staff live, learn and work. RACP acknowledges Maori as tangata whenua and Te Tiriti o Waitangi partners in Aotearoa New Zealand.
Find out more about our commitment to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and Maori health equity.
#J-18808-Ljbffr