MEMBER CONTENT
The ANZSRS membership includes experienced professionals involved in Respiratory Medicine as well new graduates and those wishing to develop in a specific area. Many of the experienced members of the society have valuable skills, expertise and insights that could be more extensively shared within the ANZSRS membership. The ANZSRS Board has harnessed this valuable resource in the establishment of the ANZSRS Mentor Partnerships Program.
The ANZSRS Mentor Partnerships Program facilitates connections between members new to the profession and those seeking to advance in specific areas with experienced volunteers. Mentoring areas available include:
Successful partnerships occur when mentees have well-defined objectives for their participation in the program.
Mentee: https://forms.office.com/r/Z31NatfxjV
Mentor: https://forms.office.com/r/DjWEpxTh4X
Please note that the ANZSRS is facilitating the mentoring program however it does not endorse Mentors or Mentees.
ABN: 62 096 524 191
Contact Info
Address:
PO Box 1346 Mitcham North, Victoria 3132, Australia
Phone:
+61 3 8393 9384
Email :
[email protected]
We acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of lands, seas and waters throughout Australia, and pay respect to Elders past, present and future. We recognise that health and social and emotional well-being of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples are grounded in continuous connection to culture, country, language and community.
E mihi nei mātou ki te tangata whenua - ki ngā hapū me ngā iwi Māori kua roa e noho nei hei kaitiaki i ngā whenua me ngā wai huri i Aotearoa. E whakaae nei mātou, me aro ngā pou katoa o te oranga Māori, otirā, te oranga ā-tinana, ā-hinengaro, ā-wairua, ā-whānau, ka mutu, he mea titi ēnei ki ngā hononga whai tikanga ki te ao Māori, tae pū atu ki te reo me ōna tikanga, ki te ahurea, ki ngā whenua, ki ngā whānau, ki ngā hapū, ki ngā iwi anō hoki.
We acknowledge Māori as tangata whenua who have long served as the traditional custodians of the lands and waters throughout Aotearoa. We recognise that Māori health requires a holistic approach that considers physical, mental, emotional, social and spiritual wellbeing, and furthermore, that these are contingent upon meaningful connection to the Māori world, in particular, to the language and customs, culture, lands, whānau, hapū and iwi.