Gender Equity in Australian Health Leadership
Clare Skinner Clare Skinner

Gender Equity in Australian Health Leadership

The majority of public health boards have close to equal representation of women as board members however women are underrepresented in Chair roles. Victoria has significantly more women on health boards, whereas New South Wales has significantly less women on health boards and in Chair positions. 

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A sense of shared purpose
Clare Skinner Clare Skinner

A sense of shared purpose

The ED CoP has served two equally important roles: sharing information, resources and working through service challenges collaboratively has been enormously helpful; and connection with colleagues, including regular communication, sharing our concerns, and checking in on each other, has been invaluable for health care worker wellbeing during stressful and uncertain times.

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Safer coalmines, happier, healthier and more engaged canaries
Clare Skinner Clare Skinner

Safer coalmines, happier, healthier and more engaged canaries

Addressing and limiting burnout and its significant impacts on emergency physicians is an important and ongoing challenge, requiring much more than a focus on individual resilience. This is a key understanding which guides and informs the Australasian College for Emergency Medicine's holistic approach and advocacy efforts when it comes to the wellness of emergency physicians and the health systems in which they operate.

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The leadership role of emergency directors
Clare Skinner Clare Skinner

The leadership role of emergency directors

After a career of shared lockers, I suddenly had my own office. The sign on the door said ‘Director’. There was no shying away – I was Impostor-in-Chief. I spent the day rearranging the furniture, hoping no-one would notice how ill-equipped I was for the job.

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Racism goes viral
Clare Skinner Clare Skinner

Racism goes viral

Learn about the many cultures in our world so you are better equipped to recognise racism. Read, travel, make friends and be curious. Don’t make assumptions about what people think or believe, or how they would like to be treated, based on their appearance or accent. Ask them.

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Civility - a Twitter thread
Clare Skinner Clare Skinner

Civility - a Twitter thread

It’s the beginning of a new clinical year and a good time for us all to think about how we can best work together. We should all reflect on our behaviour occasionally and think about the impact we have on others.

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At a time of looming crisis, a vision for health system transformation
Clare Skinner Clare Skinner

At a time of looming crisis, a vision for health system transformation

If large numbers of Australians require urgent hospital treatment for the novel coronavirus, how will the system cope? With great difficulty, one would assume, given the widespread concerns raised in recent months at Croakey about the pressures on Emergency Departments. In this timely wish list for health system reform, emergency physician Dr Clare Skinner offers 11 suggestions for improving emergency care, many of which would have wider flow on effects.

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Bushfire sun
Clare Skinner Clare Skinner

Bushfire sun

While the scale of the current fires is unprecedented, bushfires are a regular occurrence around here. Most Australians have been touched by fire. When we see the pink ‘bushfire sun’ we know what it means. For me, the smell of bushfire smoke triggers complex memories.

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Collegiality - a tale over the telephone
Clare Skinner Clare Skinner

Collegiality - a tale over the telephone

As admitting officer, I’m here, on the end of the phone, to help you. It’s so much easier when we’re nice to each other, and it’s better for our patients as well. We’ll work together. We’ll be polite, professional and well prepared. We’ll respect each other’s skills and be mindful of our contexts. And we’ll be forgiving when things don’t go perfectly. Who knows? One day, we might become friends.

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Changing minds: Reflections of a mental health champion
Clare Skinner Clare Skinner

Changing minds: Reflections of a mental health champion

We work on the edge. We see all of humanity. We feel the cracks in the system. We meet people on their worst days and we know how easily lines can be crossed. We need to be social justice warriors – because our skill and experience can drive important structural and cultural change for good.

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Gender inequity in medicine and medical leadership
Clare Skinner Clare Skinner

Gender inequity in medicine and medical leadership

Last month, the Medical Journal of Australia called for manuscript submissions on the topic of “Women in medicine and medical leadership in Australia — is there gender equity?” We answer with a resounding no. Indeed, we believe the question itself perpetuates gender disparity by suggesting that the answer is up for debate.

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Interdependence - a tale from the wards
Clare Skinner Clare Skinner

Interdependence - a tale from the wards

He spent a few minutes showing me how the safety device worked and giving me tips for getting cannulas in first time. ‘Don’t tell anyone I did your cannula’, he whispered, and left. This small act would become central to my philosophy and practice of medicine. Civility saves lives.

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ED entomology - a tale from the resus room
Clare Skinner Clare Skinner

ED entomology - a tale from the resus room

‘Be a honey bee – Not a fly’. Think about it. Bees seek out flowers and honey. Make an active choice to be a honey bee. Choose to be the sort of colleague that you would like to work with. Choose to be part of creating a workplace culture that allows you and your colleagues to thrive.

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Inspiring Doctors - profile #35
Clare Skinner Clare Skinner

Inspiring Doctors - profile #35

I started medicine aiming to have an academic career in public health and never thought I would be a clinician at all – yet somehow I’ve fetched up doing something very clinical.

The story of my career - so far…

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Put your hands up
Clare Skinner Clare Skinner

Put your hands up

There is irrefutable evidence that women perform very well in management roles, and that female leadership benefits not only women, but everyone – it lifts the whole enterprise. Chances are that our health system is missing out on the contributions of many capable and talented women and is all the poorer for it.

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A large-scale mass casualty simulation to develop the non-technical skills medical students require for collaborative teamwork
Clare Skinner Clare Skinner

A large-scale mass casualty simulation to develop the non-technical skills medical students require for collaborative teamwork

A large class teaching activity, framed as a simulation of a natural disaster is an acceptable and effective activity for medical students to develop the non-technical skills of collaboration, negotiation and communication, which are essential to team working. The design could be of value in medical schools in disaster prone areas, including within low resource countries, and as a feasible intervention for learning the non-technical skills that are needed for patient safety.

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NSW Doctors’ orchestra feels the beat
Clare Skinner Clare Skinner

NSW Doctors’ orchestra feels the beat

Dr Clare Skinner works in the Emergency Department of Sydney’s Royal North Shore Hospital. She also plays the oboe and once a year joins around 60 other medicos from around the state to indulge their passion for music, performing as the NSW Doctors’ Orchestra. The proceeds go to the charities related to music and medicine. She tells us about this year’s performance, given in May.

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