
The practice of intensive care medicine involves skills across many disciplines, including anaesthetics, surgery, internal medicine and emergency medicine, and focuses on the support of critically ill patients who require or are at high risk if requiring one or life support systems. Formal Intensive care medicine training was first established in 2 separate schemes in the College of Physicians (RACP) and in the College of Anaesthetists (ANZCA) in the 1970s.
Although Australia and New Zealand were the first countries in the world to establish such training schemes, this is a relatively young discipline compared with many long established specialities. In 2002, these 2 schemes were merged into a single training program, supervised by the Joint Faculty of Intensive Care Medicine, which reported to its 2 parent colleges. Initially this is program could be entered by first part examination of either College (RACP, ANZCA) but now the College of Emergency Medicine (ACEM) first part examination will also enable access to this training scheme. More recently (2008), the Joint Faculty members have voted in favor of forming an independent College of Intensive Care but this has yet to occur.
An intensive care specialist, or intensivist, needs to have excellent communication, interpersonal, clinical and patient management skills, an aptitude to cope with stress, and an understanding of medical ethics. This is not a specialty for the faint hearted but is a great career choice for those who seek professional challenges, are team players and good communicators. Intensive care medicine is a highly procedural specialty and requires expertise in cardiopulmonary resuscitation, organ and airway management, mechanical ventilation and renal replacement therapy, to list just a few.
Training, education and standards for intensive care medicine are handled by the Joint Faculty of Intensive Care Medicine, which is a joint faculty of the Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists and the Royal Australasian College of Physicians. Education... more
Trainees may enter the basic training program any time after completion of the first postgraduate year. Employment is to be secured independently at a hospital accredited for basic training and the trainee must then register with the faculty. If registering... more
Training takes six years in total to complete comprising three years of basic training and three years of advanced training.... more
Current costs of training Trainee once only registration fee: $1500 Basic annual training fee: $800 Advanced annual training fee: $1550 Training assessment fee: $500 Primary examination fee: $3,000 (per exam) Fellowship examination fee: $3,000 (per exam) OTS clinical performance assessment... more
Training should normally be continuous – one year of core training must be continuous; the second core year may be spent discontinuously in two periods of 6 months each. Part-time training will be considered on an individual basis and an... more
Most intensive care units (ICUs) in Australia are closed units, where intensivists are the primary care physicians who take responsibility for orders and treatment decisions as long as a patient is in the ICU. However, there is usually good collaboration... more
Relationships between intensive care specialists and their patients can be short or long-term, depending on the condition of the patient at admission to the ICU but does not usually extend beyond a few days following the treatment period in the... more
Intensive care medicine is an intellectually demanding specialty requiring in-depth knowledge of physiology and pharmacology, particularly cardiac and pulmonary physiology as well as familiarity with the wide variety of life support devices. There are no separate medical and surgical ICUs... more
Medico-legal issues, as with all aspects with medical practice, are becoming increasingly significant. Use our risk category tool to assess this specialty.... more
Intensive care medicine is predominantly practiced in ICUs located in public and private hospitals in capital cities, with the majority of intensivists in acute care public hospitals; there are limited intensive care facilities available in regional and country towns. Intensivists... more
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The Ultimate Guide to Choosing a Medical Specialty
by Brian Freeman
Freeman, B. (2007). The ultimate guide to choosing a medical specialty. New York, McGraw-Hill Medical.
A very useful and reader-friendly medical spec Read more