AOA recognises that members have a higher risk of mental health issues compared to both the Australian population and other professions (according to a 2013 national beyondblue survey) and is committed to providing support.
For personal and confidential health and wellness advice, including stress and mental illness, drug and alcohol problems, or personal and financial difficulties, members and their immediate family members can access support from Converge International. Call 1300 687 327 or email
eap@convergeintl.com.au for more information.
Through RACS, AOA members are allowed four free Converge International sessions per calendar year via telephone, online or face to face. These services are confidential and private. They also offer 24/7 emergency telephone counselling.
The AMA also offers all doctors a web-based tool that evaluates the safety of your roster. The AMA’s fatigue risk assessment tool enables you to track your work, on-call, recreational and sleeping hours over a week, and determine whether your work arrangements are placing you at risk of serious fatigue. The assessment tool is available on their website:
http://safehours.ama.com.au/
AOA recommends that legal advice and support be sought from members’ Medical Defence Organisation (MDO) as required. In addition to having lawyers who deal constantly with issues that can arise in the workplace, each of the MDOs have extensive wellness support programs for their members, such as external counselling providers.
Ethi-call is a further support service offered by The Ethics Centre as a free, independent, national helpline. It provides expert and impartial guidance to navigate challenges. Operating for over 25 years, Ethi-call deals with personal or professional ethical issues. It offers a private, anonymous one-hour call with an ethics counsellor. Ethi-call is available day and night, seven days a week by appointment. More information is available here:
www.ethics.org.au/ethi-call/ethi-call
AOA strongly recommends that members have their own general practitioner and see them for health check-ups on a regular basis. Appointments with a GP are completely confidential. A condition will only be reported to a regulator in extreme circumstances where your GP believes your behaviour or conduct may place your colleagues or the public at risk of harm.
AOA also supports a mentoring program which may assist members, particularly young surgeons. More information is included under ‘Join the AOA Mentoring Program’.