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Liverpool scientist receives prestigious teaching award

Liverpool scientist receives prestigious teaching award

Shailendra Gune has won the Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia (RCPA) 2023 Konrad Muller Outstanding Teaching Award (Scientist).

Con­grat­u­la­tions to Shailen­dra Gune from our Liv­er­pool Lab­o­ra­to­ry who was recog­nised with the pres­ti­gious award, which is pre­sent­ed to indi­vid­u­als who have made an out­stand­ing con­tri­bu­tion to the teach­ing of pathol­o­gy, in par­tic­u­lar the teach­ing of registrars.

Shailen­dra has been work­ing at NSW Health Pathol­o­gy for 37 years. He received the acco­lade in front of a full house (and his very proud wife Soniya!) in Ade­laide at the annu­al Roy­al Col­lege of Pathol­o­gists of Australasia’s Pathol­o­gy Update 2024: Answers in Ade­laide.

Shailen­dra was sin­gled out for his approach­able style by the Roy­al Col­lege of Pathol­o­gists of Australasia.

“He is an exem­plary, approach­able sci­en­tist whose exper­tise is high­ly val­ued by both lab­o­ra­to­ry and anatom­i­cal pathol­o­gy Trainees. He is cred­it­ed with assist­ing Trainees in their exam­i­na­tion prepa­ra­tions with a high pass rate.”

Shailen­dra is the Senior Sci­en­tist in charge Cytol­ogy at our Liv­er­pool Lab­o­ra­to­ry and teach­es all lev­els of sci­en­tists and reg­is­trars in Anatom­i­cal Pathology.

He is a trust­ed super­vi­sor and men­tor and we are thrilled that his hard work and ded­i­ca­tion to build­ing up our future sci­en­tif­ic, tech­ni­cal and med­ical staff has been recog­nised by the RCPA.

“I am extreme­ly proud to receive this pres­ti­gious award,” Shailen­dra said.

A group of people, including wearing academic robes, smiling.
Shailen­dra Gune (sec­ond from right) with his award.

“I’m grate­ful to NSW Health Pathol­o­gy for recog­nis­ing my con­tri­bu­tion to the devel­op­ment of future Cytopathologists.

“Teach­ing is my way of pass­ing on my Cytol­ogy knowl­edge and expe­ri­ence to all. Thank you to all the reg­is­trars and sci­en­tists who have trained under me”.

“I also want to acknowl­edge the con­tri­bu­tion of Pro­fes­sor C. Soon Lee, Dr Donya Tohi­di-Esfa­hani, Staff Spe­cial­ists at NSWHP’s Liv­er­pool Lab­o­ra­to­ry and every­one in the Cytol­ogy Team.”.

Shailen­dra start­ed the Cytol­ogy ser­vice back in 1986 at the insti­ga­tion of the then Direc­tor of South West Area Pathol­o­gy Ser­vice (SWAPS), Dr Robert MacIn­doe, who was extreme­ly pas­sion­ate in expand­ing the role of Cytol­ogy in the South West Syd­ney area.

“He ensured that I attend­ed any Cytol­ogy con­fer­ences and train­ing pro­grams, both in Aus­tralia and over­seas so that the pathol­o­gy ser­vice would be at the pointy-end of cur­rent and future Cytol­ogy concepts.

“I was the only Cytol­o­gist then and over time, we grew and added Cytol­o­gists at Bankstown and Lid­combe Hospitals.”

“We reg­u­lar­ly trav­el to all sec­tor hos­pi­tals for Fine Nee­dle Aspi­ra­tion (FNA) pro­ce­dures and in 2016, I com­menced Rapid On Site Eval­u­a­tion (ROSE) of EBUS pro­ce­dures (Endo Bronchial Ultra­sound) and Endoscopy Ultra­sound (EUS) for lung and pan­cre­at­ic tumours in a col­lab­o­ra­tion with Dr Jonathan Williamson, Res­pi­ra­to­ry Spe­cial­ist at Liv­er­pool Hos­pi­tal and Dr David Abi Han­nah and Dr Milan Bas­san, who are Gas­teroen­terol­o­gy Specialists.

“With these pro­ce­dures, we can now obtain very minute sam­ples and using Mol­e­c­u­lar Biol­o­gy tech­niques with our own inhouse Oncomine Sequen­tial Analyser, we can detect spe­cif­ic onco­genes for our patient’s per­son­alised can­cer treatment.

“This sen­si­tive Oncomine Instru­ment Analyser is a state-of-the-art instru­ment for detec­tion of over 46 onco­genes derived from DNA and RNA muta­tions for suit­able mol­e­c­u­lar and immune therapy.”

Shailen­dra has seen a lot of changes and advance­ments in this field but says the art of Cytol­ogy has not changed over the years; it is still morphology!

“What has changed are the ancil­lary tech­niques that we utilise on sam­ples for front­line can­cer treat­ment, so we can help deliv­er bet­ter patient out­comes and deliv­er more per­son­alised med­i­cines to help each per­son have the best chance at beat­ing can­cer. That’s what dri­ves me.”

Con­grat­u­la­tions Shailen­dra, what a well-deserved honour!

 

International Women’s Day 2024 – investing in women!

This year’s International Women’s Day theme is Count Her In: Invest in Women. Accelerate Progress. Here at NSW Health Pathology, we’re proud of the progress we’ve made, but there’s more to be done.

Inter­na­tion­al Women’s Day 2024 is high­light­ing the need for eco­nom­ic empow­er­ment of women. Accord­ing to UN Women Aus­tralia, when women are giv­en equal oppor­tu­ni­ties to earn, learn and lead, entire com­mu­ni­ties thrive.

NSW Health Pathol­o­gy (NSWHP) has an envi­able record when it comes to equi­table rep­re­sen­ta­tion and employ­ment of women.

Over­all, women make up 70% of the work­force at NSWHP.

In almost every type of role in our organ­i­sa­tion of over 5,000 peo­ple, women are in the major­i­ty – from nurs­ing to sci­en­tif­ic and tech­ni­cal offi­cers, man­agers, and med­ical roles.

with title and logo

Our Chief Exec­u­tive is a woman. Her pre­de­ces­sor and the organisation’s found­ing Chief Exec­u­tive is a woman. More than a third of our Strate­gic Lead­er­ship Team are women.

But six months after being appoint­ed to the top job, Chief Exec­u­tive Vanes­sa Janis­sen says there’s still more work to do.

“It’s impor­tant we con­tin­ue to acknowl­edge the suc­cess we’ve had in get­ting equi­table rep­re­sen­ta­tion for women. The evi­dence is clear, when women are giv­en equal oppor­tu­ni­ty to earn, learn and lead every­one in soci­ety ben­e­fits. But we also know that women some­times don’t feel con­fi­dent enough to put them­selves for­ward and seek out oppor­tu­ni­ties,” Ms Janis­sen said.

“For those women just start­ing their careers in health, it’s vital for them to be able to see there are career path­ways to senior lead­er­ship and they can make a dif­fer­ence in their community.”

Although she nev­er had a set ‘career plan’ as such, Ms Janissen’s advice to young women is to seize oppor­tu­ni­ties when they arise in the workplace.

But she admits she prob­a­bly missed out on some chances for pro­gres­sion after the birth of her first child.

“The hard­est thing I found was in those years when I was start­ing a fam­i­ly. I can recall an instance where there was an oppor­tu­ni­ty at work, and I wasn’t con­sid­ered on the assump­tion I wouldn’t be inter­est­ed while rais­ing my child.

“I am a big believ­er in the idea that how we raise our chil­dren is a fam­i­ly deci­sion, not just the respon­si­bil­i­ty of women. There’s noth­ing wrong with peo­ple want­i­ng to take time off and step back from work. But we have to be care­ful to not put box­es around women or men when they are in those years or make assumptions.

“We also need to think about how we recog­nise the val­ue of old­er women in our work­force. Old­er women can expe­ri­ence dou­ble dis­crim­i­na­tion of age and gen­der. And we know that old­er women are retir­ing with two-thirds the retire­ment sav­ings of their male coun­ter­parts. We need to cel­e­brate the wis­dom and expe­ri­ence that con­tributes to mak­ing our health­care ser­vice world leading.

“Final­ly cel­e­brat­ing and lift­ing up women is a job for all of us. It’s not tak­ing advan­tage away from any­one. As the say­ing goes – a ris­ing tide gath­ers all boats. So too gen­der equal­i­ty, when we get it right, is good for every­one,” Ms Janis­sen said.

Why celebrate International Women’s Day?

We asked a few of the women at NSW Health Pathol­o­gy what Inter­na­tion­al Women’s Day means to them.

Dr Stephanie Hales is the Asso­ciate Direc­tor of Inte­gra­tion Sci­ence at NSWHP’s Foren­sic & Ana­lyt­i­cal Sci­ence Ser­vice. She says hav­ing women rep­re­sent­ed equal­ly in the work­place helps to bring diverse per­spec­tive and ulti­mate­ly leads to bet­ter deci­sion-mak­ing and innovation.

A woman smiling, standing in front of a sign reading 'Centre for Forensic Medicine'.
Dr Stephanie Hales, Asso­ciate Direc­tor Inte­gra­tion Sci­ence, Foren­sic & Ana­lyt­i­cal Sci­ence Ser­vice (FASS).

“I have had some amaz­ing boss­es (both male and female) and men­tors who have per­son­al­ly sup­port­ed my career and been cham­pi­ons for the role of women in lead­er­ship. This has been crit­i­cal in giv­ing me the con­fi­dence to take on new and chal­leng­ing roles through­out my career,” she explains.

“I have been extreme­ly lucky to have had a real­ly strong female role mod­el in my life with my mum – a whirl­wind of ener­gy who ran her own busi­ness, vol­un­teered at sev­er­al organ­i­sa­tions, and was a cam­paign­er for women’s rights. I have also had a fam­i­ly who always told me I could do any­thing. This means that when I have faced bar­ri­ers (as you inevitably will do in life) it has allowed me to chal­lenge these, see them as tem­po­rary set­backs, and to remain pret­ty resilient.”

Rho­da Kip­tanui is NSW Health Pathology’s Head of Diver­si­ty and Inclu­sion. She says Inter­na­tion­al Women’s Day is a reminder of the impor­tant con­tri­bu­tion and issues that women share around the world.

A woman wearing glasses and a blue and white shirt smiling.
Rho­da Kip­tanui, Head of Diver­si­ty and Inclusion.

“I am grate­ful to the ear­ly teach­ers in my life who paid atten­tion to my learn­ing needs and opened the doors to the pow­er of lit­er­a­cy and numer­a­cy; the basic keys to under­stand­ing what is hap­pen­ing around us.

“My advice to women, and oth­ers, is that it’s okay to be dif­fer­ent or have sim­i­lar needs to oth­ers. Pos­i­tive change hap­pens when more women have the oppor­tu­ni­ty to grow and progress. If you are a woman (or a man) who has had any of these oppor­tu­ni­ties, please look back and sup­port the next cohort com­ing after you.”

Rebec­ca Haack is the Man­ag­er of our Camp­bell­town lab­o­ra­to­ry and believes Inter­na­tion­al Women’s Day is a great time to recog­nise those peo­ple who bring joy and inspi­ra­tion to our work­ing day.

A woman smiling.
Camp­bell­town Lab­o­ra­to­ry man­ag­er, Rebec­ca Haack.

“I start­ed in NSW Health Pathol­o­gy as a trainee. After hav­ing my first child I came back and worked night­shift at the Roy­al North Shore Hos­pi­tal lab­o­ra­to­ry for sev­er­al years, which suit­ed our fam­i­ly,” she said.

“I then trans­ferred to Liv­er­pool, which was clos­er to home and worked part-time, even­tu­al­ly being pro­mot­ed to a Senior Hos­pi­tal Sci­en­tist posi­tion. When I was ready to go full-time, I moved to Camp­bell­town as the lab man­ag­er. I have nev­er felt my oppor­tu­ni­ties were lim­it­ed due to work­ing part-time or being a work­ing mother.”

Dr Bente Talseth-Palmer is Research Strat­e­gy Lead at NSWHP. She says it’s a day to acknowl­edge and cel­e­brate the incred­i­ble achieve­ments of women but also to raise aware­ness about the inequal­i­ties women around the world still face.

A woman smiling, sitting on a balcony with a city view in the background.
Dr Bente Talseth-Palmer, Research Strat­e­gy Lead.

“This is why we still need women quo­tas on boards and high­er posi­tions. Women who choose to have both a career and chil­dren are still dis­ad­van­taged in career pro­gres­sion, and it would be nice to close these gaps fur­ther,” she said.

“About a decade ago I was lucky to meet a won­der­ful men­tor, Jen­nifer Leslie, a char­tered accoun­tant and a cer­ti­fied Finan­cial Plan­ner with 15 years of board-lev­el expe­ri­ence, who shared her incred­i­ble jour­ney and wis­dom with me – show­ing that hav­ing both a career and chil­dren is possible.”

Celebrating our people at Pathology Update 2024

Staff at NSW Health Pathology took home a swag of awards and three of our scientific trainees graduated with a Fellowship of the Faculty of Science at Pathology Update 2024 in Adelaide.

The Roy­al Col­lege of Pathol­o­gists of Aus­trala­sia (RCPA) held its annu­al Pathol­o­gy Update 2024 in Ade­laide on March 1–3, attract­ing hun­dreds of del­e­gates and an array of local and inter­na­tion­al speak­ers. The theme of this year’s event, “Answers in Adelaide”.

NSW Health Pathol­o­gy would like to con­grat­u­late our three sci­en­tif­ic trainees who grad­u­at­ed with a Fel­low­ship of the Fac­ul­ty of Science:
• Nicole Bain from John Hunter Hos­pi­tal (Genet­ic Pathology)
• Julie Sher­fan from Con­cord Hos­pi­tal (Chem­i­cal Pathol­o­gy), and
• Xiumei Wei from Suther­land Hos­pi­tal (Immunopathol­o­gy).

A group of people, including wearing academic robes, smiling.
(L to R): Vanes­sa Thom­son, Xiumei Wei, Julie Sher­fan, Shailen­dra Gune, Prof Rob Lindeman

“A Fel­low­ship (or PhD) is the high­est qual­i­fi­ca­tion a sci­en­tist can attain,” explains Vanes­sa Thom­son, NSWHP Direc­tor Sci­en­tif­ic and Tech­ni­cal Strategy.

“It’s high­ly regard­ed and an avenue to sci­en­tif­ic lead­er­ship in the pro­fes­sion,” she said.

Spe­cial­ist Anatom­i­cal and Foren­sic Pathol­o­gist based in Wol­lon­gong, Dr Bernie I’Ons, was recog­nised by the RCPA as one of the Found­ing Fel­lows of the new­ly estab­lished Fac­ul­ty of Post-Mortem Imaging.

NSW Health Pathol­o­gy staff were also recog­nised with a num­ber of awards at Pathol­o­gy Update 2024.

Shailen­dra Gune, Senior Sci­en­tist in Cytopathol­o­gy at Liv­er­pool, received the pres­ti­gious Kon­rad Muller RCPA Out­stand­ing Teach­ing Award (Sci­en­tist) for 2023.

The Award is pre­sent­ed to indi­vid­u­als who have made an out­stand­ing con­tri­bu­tion to the teach­ing of pathol­o­gy, in par­tic­u­lar the teach­ing of registrars.

Susi Guinane and Kyra Lyell from NSWHP’s Statewide Peri­na­tal Post­mortem Ser­vice received the Peri­na­tal Con­fer­ence and Edu­ca­tion Award, which will allow them to attend more pathol­o­gy relat­ed events such as the PSANZ con­fer­ence in New Zealand lat­er this year.

“This will allow NSW Health Pathol­o­gy to share the way the Peri­na­tal Post­mortem Ser­vice has been set up to help oth­ers look­ing to set up a suc­cess­ful cen­tralised peri­na­tal post­mortem ser­vice and to share the ups and downs of the NSWHP expe­ri­ence over the past 5 years,” said Susi.

RCPA Mer­i­to­ri­ous Ser­vice Awards were also pre­sent­ed to four NSWHP cur­rent and for­mer pathologists:
• Dr Ray­mond Chan – Roy­al Prince Alfred Hos­pi­tal, Head of Microbiology
• Dr Jan­ice Fletch­er – Prince of Wales Hos­pi­tal Genet­ic Pathol­o­gy (now retired from NSWHP)
• A/Prof Ragh­wa Shar­ma – West­mead Anatom­i­cal Pathology
• Dr Dianne Lit­tle – Foren­sic Pathol­o­gist (for­mer­ly of NSWHP Foren­sic Med­i­cine Lidcombe)

Micro­bi­ol­o­gy reg­is­trar at NSWHP-ICPMR West­mead, Annaleise Howard-Jones, won the DS Nel­son Prize for the best research pre­sen­ta­tion by a trainee. She pre­sent­ed her team’s work on the recent Mur­ray Riv­er encephali­tis virus out­break in Australia.

Pathol­o­gy Update 2024 kicked off with a ses­sion for trainees of the RCPA Fac­ul­ty of Sci­ence. Sev­er­al of our sci­en­tif­ic trainees and staff also pre­sent­ed oral and poster pre­sen­ta­tions at the conference.

Vim­lesh Dhir, Krys­tle Standen, Ani­la Hash­mi, Pra­bin Gyawali and Xiumei Wei were among sci­en­tif­ic trainees pre­sent­ing their research at the con­fer­ence on Day 1.

Dr Catri­ona Hal­l­i­day, Prin­ci­pal Sci­en­tist spe­cial­is­ing in Mycol­o­gy at West­mead and one of our sci­en­tif­ic lead­ers, was also invit­ed to speak on ‘Mol­e­c­u­lar in fun­gal diag­nos­tics (includ­ing der­mato­phytes)’ at the Mycol­o­gy Masterclass.

It was an out­stand­ing event, show­cas­ing the breadth of tal­ent and exper­tise of our hard-work­ing peo­ple here at NSW Health Pathology!

Meet Dr Vidiya Ramachandran – Clinical Trial Coordinator

Dr Ramachandran has been working at NSW Health Pathology for over a decade. But alongside her passion for improving public health, she also has a love of dancing; Bollywood style!

Vidiya joined NSW Health Pathol­o­gy (NSWHP) for a year in 2005 to set up the TGA-licensed Nucle­ic Acid Test­ing (NAT) lab­o­ra­to­ry at the Serol­o­gy and Virol­o­gy Divi­sion (SAViD) locat­ed at the Prince of Wales Hos­pi­tal in Randwick.

Her move from aca­d­e­m­ic research to diag­nos­tic pathol­o­gy required not only a shift in mind­set but also an expan­sion of her knowl­edge base and tech­ni­cal skills.

In research, the focus is often on hypoth­e­sis dri­ven inquiries, explor­ing the unknown and push­ing the bound­aries in sci­ence. In con­trast, diag­nos­tic pathol­o­gy demands a pre­ci­sion ori­ent­ed approach, where the objec­tive is to deliv­er accu­rate, time­ly results that direct­ly affect patient care decisions.

She returned to NSWHP in 2012 and even­tu­al­ly became the Senior Hos­pi­tal Sci­en­tist in charge of the NAT lab­o­ra­to­ry, which won the 2023 NSW Premier’s Award for High­est Qual­i­ty Healthcare.

In 2021, Vidiya tran­si­tioned to her cur­rent role as the Clin­i­cal Tri­al Coor­di­na­tor for the Illawar­ra Shoal­haven region based at Wol­lon­gong Hospital.

“As a clin­i­cal tri­al coor­di­na­tor, I love the direct impact my work has on pub­lic health,” she says.

“Col­lab­o­rat­ing with diverse teams of pro­fes­sion­als allows me to con­tribute my knowl­edge while gain­ing insights from oth­ers in dif­fer­ent fields. The field of pathol­o­gy thrives on col­lab­o­ra­tion, draw­ing on the diverse exper­tise of pathol­o­gists, tech­ni­cians, clin­i­cians and researchers.

“More­over, I find per­son­al ful­fill­ment in con­tribut­ing to sci­en­tif­ic knowl­edge, know­ing that my efforts are improv­ing patient out­comes and mak­ing a pos­i­tive dif­fer­ence in pub­lic health.”

But when the lab coat comes off, Vidiya says she gets her danc­ing shoes on!

“When I am not busy coor­di­nat­ing clin­i­cal tri­als for NSW Health Pathol­o­gy, I trans­form into a danc­ing mae­stro, chan­nel­ing the vibrant rhythms of Indi­an clas­si­cal dance and the ener­gy of Bol­ly­wood,” she says.

“I am all about express­ing myself through the pow­er of dance and it is my ulti­mate hap­py place.

A woman dancing with her arms raised, wearing a traditional Indian-style dress.

“I start­ed learn­ing Bharatanatyam, an Indi­an clas­si­cal dance, at a young age age and kept at it all through high school.

“I am grate­ful that I can still pur­sue this pas­sion today. I also teach dance, and I love being able to share this part of my cul­ture and my love for dance with my students.

“Danc­ing is an excel­lent stress reliev­er and a superb way to enhance fit­ness,” she said.

She loves trav­el­ling, espe­cial­ly back home to Sri Lan­ka to spend time with her par­ents and enjoy her mum’s home-cooked meals.

Vidiya’s advice for bud­ding young sci­en­tists is simple.

“Put your­self out there for oppor­tu­ni­ties and embrace oppor­tu­ni­ties. Don’t be afraid to take risks, and fol­low your passion.”

Welcome to one of our newest recruits!

Asraa Al Saadi struggled to find work after moving to Australia from Romania. An employment forum aimed at jobseekers from migrant and refugee backgrounds helped her to land a dream job with us!

Asraa trained as a doc­tor, but she had lit­tle suc­cess find­ing a role for years after arriv­ing in Australia.

In Octo­ber 2023 she attend­ed the Black­town Employ­ment Accel­er­a­tor event, putting her in touch with a dozen employ­ers, includ­ing NSW Health Pathol­o­gy, that were active­ly seek­ing can­di­dates across West­ern Sydney.

“All I can say is that a mir­a­cle hap­pened to me that day,” Asraa said. She met with NSW Health Pathol­o­gy staff at the Black­town event and went on to suc­cess­ful­ly apply for a job with the organisation.

Jes­si­ca Lee, Deputy Direc­tor Strate­gic HR & Projects at NSW Health Pathol­o­gy, says attend­ing the Employ­ment Accel­er­a­tor helped raise aware­ness of NSW Health Pathol­o­gy as a poten­tial employ­er with­in cul­tur­al­ly and lin­guis­ti­cal­ly diverse communities.

“Nor­mal­ly, we adver­tise either inter­nal­ly to NSW Health or exter­nal­ly via iwork­forn­sw and oth­er job boards,” Jes­si­ca said.

“We always pri­ori­tise the right cul­tur­al fit and the nec­es­sary skillset to per­form the role. By attend­ing the Black­town Employ­ment Accel­er­a­tor, we were able to tap into a tal­ent pool that may have pre­vi­ous­ly been overlooked.”

Jes­si­ca and the NSW Health Pathol­o­gy team had the priv­i­lege of help­ing sev­er­al can­di­dates, includ­ing Asraa, through the recruit­ment process.

As for Asraa, it wasn’t just the con­ver­sa­tions at the event or access to net­work­ing oppor­tu­ni­ties that inspired her – it was the sup­port she received from Jes­si­ca and Rho­da Kip­tanui, Head of Diver­si­ty and Inclu­sion, through­out the appli­ca­tion process that made a dif­fer­ence in land­ing her dream job.

People sitting at tables talking, near a NSW Health Pathology banner.
NSW Health Pathol­o­gy staff attend the Black­town Employ­ment Accel­er­a­tor event.

“This assis­tance pro­vid­ed me with some much need­ed men­tal and emo­tion­al clar­i­ty and allowed me to per­form in my inter­view,” Asraa said. “I have always dreamed of work­ing at West­mead Hos­pi­tal because of my love for the med­ical field and the prox­im­i­ty to my home – but the fact that it came true is unbelievable.

“I am more con­fi­dent thanks to their help and am work­ing towards my goals of mak­ing my kids proud of me – my dreams have real­ly become a real­i­ty,” she concluded.

Asraa is now work­ing as a tech­ni­cal assistant/pathology col­lec­tor (phle­botomist) at NSWHP West­mead, which is based at one of the busiest hos­pi­tals in the state. She is cur­rent­ly fin­ish­ing her pathol­o­gy col­lec­tor train­ing and is work­ing in the out­pa­tients depart­ment, but she’ll soon join the rotat­ing col­lec­tions ros­ter at NSWHP’s Auburn, Black­town and Mount Druitt Hos­pi­tal col­lec­tion centres.

Col­lec­tors like Asraa are the friend­ly face of pathol­o­gy, pro­vid­ing com­pas­sion­ate and reas­sur­ing sup­port dur­ing the some­times anx­i­ety-induc­ing sam­ple col­lec­tion process.

Find all NSW Health Pathology’s cur­rent job oppor­tu­ni­ties here.

‘Bernie factor’ boosts anatomical and forensic pathology recruits

The enthusiasm and encouragement of Dr Bernie l’Ons is leading more young doctors to choose careers in pathology disciplines that are experiencing a significant shortage in Australia and across the world.

Dr I’ons is a rare and high­ly-regard­ed Spe­cial­ist Foren­sic Pathol­o­gist and Anatom­i­cal Pathol­o­gist at our Foren­sic Med­i­cine Wol­lon­gong service.

He spear­head­ed a 10-week pro­gram that lets young doc­tors work in these crit­i­cal pathol­o­gy dis­ci­plines before decid­ing their spe­cial­ist careers.

This year, two grad­u­ates of his pro­gram joined us as Anatom­i­cal Pathol­o­gy trainees, includ­ing Dr Erwin­preet Kaur who cred­its the ‘Bernie fac­tor’ for her choice.

Bernie fac
Dr Erwin­preet Kaur

Dr I’Ons said he had the priv­i­lege of work­ing with some amaz­ing young doc­tors in the pro­gram, sev­er­al of whom made major career shifts as a result, with one switch­ing from Psy­chi­a­try to Foren­sic Pathology.

In NSW there are cur­rent­ly four Foren­sic Pathol­o­gy reg­is­trars, and three of them came through the Wol­lon­gong pro­gram, includ­ing Dr Michael Chang who joined us last year and is a Foren­sic Pathol­o­gy reg­is­trar at our Foren­sic Med­i­cine New­cas­tle ser­vice (Michael’s broth­er, Dr Will Chang joined us this year as an Anatom­i­cal Pathol­o­gy reg­is­trar at Wag­ga Wagga).

Dr Michael Chang
Dr Michael Chang

“I think they see the chal­lenge, the val­ue and the joy of pathol­o­gy. In their term here they see that pathol­o­gy is intrigu­ing whether it’s Foren­sic or Anatom­i­cal,” Dr I’Ons said.

“They see dis­ease with their eyes, touch it with their hands, smell it with their nos­trils! They learn how to read CT scans, inter­pret a lot of data, under­stand dis­ease epi­demi­ol­o­gy, exam­ine and under­stand all sorts of pathol­o­gy, includ­ing brain pathology.

“They see the won­der­ful vari­ety of dis­eases and can begin to map out their role in this some­what hid­den and vast­ly under­rat­ed trea­sure chest of medicine.”

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