About the AST

Embark on a journey in Emergency Medicine with Advanced Specialised Training (AST) as part of the ACRRM Fellowship program.

From pre-hospital care to emergency department assessment and ongoing management, the AST equips you to handle a wide range of patient care activities. Whether you're in an isolated solo practice or a regional hospital with specialty services, our AST in Emergency Medicine prepares you many scenarios.

With a curriculum covering essential disciplines like anaesthetics, surgery, orthopaedics, internal medicine, and paediatrics, you'll develop comprehensive expertise to excel in this field.

Choose an AST in emergency medicine and become a skilled emergency medical practitioner, ready to make a difference when every second counts.

Emergency Medicine AST

Curriculum highlights / credentials

A Rural Generalist who completes the AST in Emergency Medicine can:

  • work independently as a senior medical officer in a rural hospital
  • work without local specialist emergency support
  • work as part of an on-site team with other skilled medical, nursing and allied health practitioners
  • provide definitive emergency medical care including emergency medicine procedural interventions for patients in Australian Triage Categories 3, 4 & 5
  • provide definitive emergency medical care including emergency medicine procedural interventions for individual patients in Australian Triage Categories 1 and 2
  • provide an emergency advisory resource to other Rural Generalists Advanced Specialised Training Emergency Medicine 
  • maximise the effectiveness of specialist outreach and telemedicine services in their communities
  • assist in training other Rural Generalists
  • assist in the development, provision and promotion of emergency services
  • engage in, foster, and encourage research
  • develop health policies and procedures for rural emergency services.

Where you can complete this AST

Training must be done at an ACRRM training post that is accredited in emergency medicine. Below you can browse training posts including hospitals and general practices.

Member stories

Read stories of ACRRM members who have or are currently training to have an AST in Emergency Medicine.

It was a love for emergency medicine, people, and the bush that landed Dr Katrina Starmer with the Royal Flying Doctor Service (RFDS). Dr Katrina discusses the soaring need for Drug and Alcohol Addiction Education after recently partaking in ACRRM’s DAAE virtual workshop.
When did you decide to become a rural GP, and why? 

I grew up in a cane farming family from the Burdekin and after studying medicine and completing a fellowship in Emergency Medicine with the Australasian College for Emergency Medicine, I realised that part of my soul needed to be re-connected with people from the bush. So, I applied for a job with the Royal Flying Doctor Service and soon found myself (crazily?) undertaking a second fellowship. I cannot fully explain how much it has saved me mentally and spiritually to reconnect with small towns and small town people (and do things like cuddle cute baby kangaroos – Q fever came to mind after the fact…). 

Where are you currently working? 

I work two days a week as a FACEM in Cairns Emergency and two days a week with the RFDS doing retrieval and now primary care clinics in Chillagoe. I’ve always said in emergency and retrieval it’s such a privilege to be with someone on the worst day of their life and try, using your professional expertise and human compassion to make that day just slightly better or at least bearable for them.  As a rural GP, you have the privilege of providing care before and beyond that day. I used to joke that as an emergency physician I only learnt how to look after people for 24 hours and after that... no idea!

Why do you think drug and alcohol addiction education (DAAE) is important? 

Each community has its own struggles and I recognise that people and communities can’t be pigeon-holed or judged for their behaviours relating to drug and alcohol addiction. We all have our own story! Considering my addiction is chewing gum, I imagine I would be perceived by most patients as naïve or a square. It’s easy to inadvertently make people with addiction feel patronised or judged which can be so destructive to a therapeutic relationship. I hope that ACRRM’s DAAE program and working in Emergency has given me a bit of a better understanding of where people are coming from.

What takeaways have you had following completion of the ACRRM DAAE Program and how will you apply these takeaways to your current role? 

The DAAE program has taught me more about harm minimisation. I give a talk to the Grade 12s at our local school each year and tell them stories about friends, family and patients that I have known who have suffered injury or died from intoxication or drug use. They also get the opportunity with the P.A.R.T.Y program to come to the hospital and run through a simulation in which they have to resuscitate a drunk driver who dies in a car accident. It’s pretty sobering for them (mind the pun) to experience the tragedy of alcohol and drug related trauma from the perspective of a health care worker.

It surprises me that in each cohort one of the students will say something like ‘we are going to take drugs anyway, so just tell us how we can do it safely’. This is a very hard question to answer. I used to think these young people were so entitled that they wanted the right to choose to take drugs, and the right to be cared for when it all went bad! Now I realise that drugs are an inevitable part of some people’s lives (unfortunately) and for those that no longer have a choice, there are things that can be done to reduce the risk to themselves and others. At the end of the session I tell the students half serious that I hope I never see them again (in Emergency that is).

Would you recommend the ACRRM DAAE Course to your colleagues? 

I would recommend the DAAE course to colleagues as it helped consolidate my knowledge and equipped me with a better understanding of external resources that are at my disposal to help patients. The online format is always a pleasure as it’s like a sticker chart that gives you a little tick each time you finish a module till the course is complete.

Each community has its own struggles and I recognise that people and communities can’t be pigeon-holed or judged for their behaviours relating to drug and alcohol addiction.
Dr Katrina
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Join Dr Katrina and see for yourself how ACRRM’s DAAE program can prepare you to appropriately manage drug and alcohol addiction in your community. With incentive options available - what are you waiting for?

Learn more and register for ACRRM’s DAAE program here.

Got a question about training?

You can call us on 1800 223 226 or contact the training team.