PCNA Biennial Conference
2024 Conference | Naarm/Melbourne
We are pleased to announce that the biennial PCNA Conference 2024 will be held in Melbourne and we have created a dedicated website for all things conference. Click on the button below to be taken to the dedicated 2024 PCNA Conference.
Previous PCNA Conferences
2022 | Virtual
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PCNA 2022 Biennial Conference
PCNA is pleased to report that the biennial PCNA Conference 2022 was a resounding success.
Please note: All presentations from PCNA 2022 are now available on-demand for 1 year from the conference date (for registered delegates only). Click here to access the virtual platform.
This year, plenary sessions presented on the following topic areas:
Nurses leading change in Australian palliative care – this was introduced by a key nursing leader from the United States before focusing on the Australian experience through a targeted panel discussion.
Updates on National Palliative Care Policy work with a focus on:
National Palliative Care Program update
Palliative Care Australia’s vision for the next 5 years
Innovations in palliative care for older Australians with a focus on:
Palliative care in Residential Aged Care Facilities – a vision for the next 5 years
Optimising assessment and management of key symptoms for older people with advanced complex illness/es – a clinical update on the current evidence
Cognitive assessments for the elderly – what tools are best for use in clinical practice?
Frailty assessments in heart failure – what tools are best for use in clinical practice?
Integrated palliative care in practice with a focus on:
Caring for people with Pancreatic Cancer in 2021 – what does best practice look like?
Genetics and palliative care– how should we integrate this into care provision?
Caring for family carers – how can we enhance support and improve their wellbeing?
Grief and bereavement in 2022 – challenges and opportunities from the COVID-19 pandemic
How can palliative care embrace digital health? This futuristic session was again led initially by a world leader in this field before moving to a panel discussion with learning focused on:
Digital health for people with palliative care needs – a vision for the next 5 years
The future of palliative care nursing – the time is now
In addition, concurrent streams were held on the following topics:
Acute Care
Evidence into Practice
Aged Care
Workforce
Paediatrics
Underserved Populations
Community Palliative Care
Safety, quality and innovation
There was also a stream of speed talks to enable those newer to presenting an opportunity to learn about and contribute to a national conference program.
Through sponsorship from the Australian Government Department of Health (DoH), PCNA was able to offer a number of professional development grants. Managed through an application process, the grant packages allowed nurses to attend the virtual conference who otherwise may not have been able to.
The grant package included the following:
A fully paid delegate registration to attend the PCNA 2022 virtual conference;
One-year membership of PCNA;*
Access to the PCNA coordinated mentorship program for health professionals in areas of need;*
Specific invitations to join the 2022 PCNA facilitated Webinar program; and access to one contemporary virtual workshop run in 2022 and available exclusively to grant recipients. *For those meeting the PCNA membership requirements.
This event would not be possible without the generous support of our Sponsors:
Department of Health
Menarini
Caring@Home
Palliative Care Australia
Carerhelp
ELDAC
GenesisCare
PCC4U
UTS
End-Of-Life Essentials
Flinders University
Quality of Care Collaborative Australiace a reality. This event would not be possible without the generous support of our Sponsors.n text goes here
2020 | Virtual
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PCNA 2020 Biennial Conference
In a first for PCNA (due to COVID-19), the 2020 Biennial Conference was changed from our initial setting of Melbourne to an online format – and what a success this event was!
Please note: All presentations from PCNA 2020 are now available on-demand until November 26, 2021 (registered delegates only). Click here to access the virtual platform.
Click here for the full program.
We were overwhelmed by the support and interaction provided by delegates from across Australia and beyond. Watching the live chat light up each morning with welcomes from so many varied areas, weather reports and emojis set such a lovely scene for our collective learning. The carefully crafted program was truly inspiring.
We had plenary sessions presented on the following topic areas:
Positioning Palliative Care Nursing in the Global Health Care Agenda
Palliative Care in Ireland and Beyond: key issues and emerging opportunities
Panel session - Positioning Palliative Care Nursing as More Than a Social Good
Reflections on the Victorian Voluntary Assisted Dying Legislation
Panel session - The Clinical Reality of Managing Voluntary Assisted Dying: Voices from The Field
Palliative Care in 2030: Opportunities to drive change
National Palliative Care Program update
ACN End of Life Care Policy Chapter update
Evidence-based knowledge and perspectives on medicinal cannabis
How a psychedelic compound may alleviate death anxiety in palliative patients
Common symptoms experienced by people receiving immunotherapy: evidence from a systematic review
Managing palliative care needs during a humanitarian crisis: always something to offer
Panel session - Palliative Care Challenges in Acute Care in the Context of COVID-19
The Vivien Bullwinkel Award – Best Abstract: A multicomponent non-pharmacological intervention to prevent delirium for hospitalised people with advanced cancer
In addition, concurrent streams were held exploring varied topics within the following themes:
Acute Care
Evidence into Practice
Workforce
Speed talks addressing varied practice points
Underserved Populations
Embracing Community
Improving Care Outcomes for Older People
Two workshops were also offered for participants with one focused on self-care (sponsored by Palliative Care Australia) and the other on radiotherapy (sponsored by GenesisCare).
Through sponsorship the Australian Government Department of Health (DoH), PCNA was able to offer a number of professional development grants. Managed through an application process, the grant packages allowed nurses to attend the virtual conference who otherwise may not have been able to.
The grant package included the following:
Fully paid delegate registration to attend PCNA 2020 virtual conference
PCNA coordinated mentorship program for health professionals in areas of need
Complimentary attendance at a PCNA workshop
One-year membership of PCNA
A total of 244 grant applications were received with 160 being successful. Grant recipients were health professionals that either work in regional and remote areas of Australia or work in the aged care setting and/or with the elderly in an end-of-life care setting.
Thank you to all who made our 2020 Conference a reality. This event would not be possible without the generous support of our Sponsors.
2018 | Brisbane
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The PCNA 2018 Biennial Conference was held at the Hilton Hotel in Brisbane on May 20 and 21, 2018. The conference was a resounding success, with both attendance numbers and abstract submissions higher than in previous years.
Click here for the full program.
Click here for photos from the conference.
PCNA, through sponsorship from Department of Health, was able to offer a number of travel and professional grants. 10 successful grant recipients were able to attend from rural and remote areas of Australia.
The successful grant recipients had this to say about their attendance at the conference:
If I had not received the grant from the PCNA/ DoH I would not have been able to attend this fantastic conference. I live and work in (regional area) and to attend any conferences it ends up being very expensive so this has been a great opportunity for which I am very grateful.
Attending the conference provided such a valuable opportunity to meet other nurses who are working in rural and remote areas who may be facing similar problems or who have overcome similar problems. The opportunity to be at and hear the forefront of palliative care research, and learn about the different projects has provided so much food for thought and many ideas for similar projects or adaptations.
The PCNA conference has provided me with so many ideas for innovation within our team, and I am sure this will benefit our team and our patients for many years to come.
I think for me, the best thing was networking with other Aged care nurses, who have so much more experience than myself, and having their contact details, and joining the aged care special interest group. Also, the encouragement I received regarding writing my first abstract and presenting my first poster at the conference. Doing these activities have increased my confidence at work. Thank you!
As a result of the networking around the ELDAC project, I am developing partnerships and a project in the my region with ELDAC and residential aged care facilities and strengthening referral pathways to specialist palliative care providers which is very exciting and came as a direct result of networking at the conference.
As a sole professional in my role as Palliative aged care resource nurse, I value the networking opportunity that is such an integral part of attending these conferences with like-minded professionals. Due to my ability to attend the conference, I also had the opportunity to present a 6 minute speed talk which enabled some further great discussion.
I work in a very isolated environment and am considered the ‘expert’ in palliative care regionally. There are no physicians, consultants etc and my CN and I are the team for the entire region, there are no community nurses in our region or 24hr patient care in the community. This can be very stressful. Being able to immerse myself in discussions on palliative care and listen to experts and others more experienced than myself was actually joyous. This really helped to give me renewed enthusiasm.
I am very interested in continuing my relationship with PCNA through a Regional and Remote Nurses Interest Group.
2016 | Canberra
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The PCNA 2016 Biennial Conference was held at the Hotel Realm in Canberra on September 11 and 12, 2016.
2014 | Sydney
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The PCNA 2014 Biennial Conference was held at the Sofitel in Sydney on April 6 and 7, 2014.
Keynote speakers
Professor Patricia Davidson is a global leader in managing cardiovascular and chronic conditions; she has recently been appointed the fourth Dean of the Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. She is a core member in the Centre for Cardiovascular and Chronic Care (CCCC) in the Faculty of Health, University of Technology Sydney NSW Australia. Patricia has many outstanding achievements in nursing and health research, particularly in the area of chronic disease management, end-stage heart failure and working with vulnerable populations.
Associate Professor Sandra Lynch, Dip Teach, BA (Illinois), MA Hons (Macq), PhD (UNSW), is Director of Centre for Faith, Ethics and Society at the University of Notre Dame Australia. Sandy is a moral philosopher whose most recent research includes work on the teaching of professional ethics, particularly on the teaching of legal and nursing ethics. Her broader research areas are in ethics and the constitution of the self, friendship and its ethical dimensions and the intersection of philosophy and literature. Her background in school education stimulated research in the areas of values education and the promotion of critical and creative thinking skills in school and in university contexts.
Workshops Facilitators
Professor Keryln Carville has extensive clinical experience and is committed to research and education within the domains of wound and ostomy care. Keryln was appointed an Inaugural Fellow of the Australian Wound Management Association in 2006. She is Chair of the Australian Pressure Injury Advisory Panel; Chair of the AWMA Australian Wound Standards Committee, Chair Pan Pacific Pressure Injury Alliance and Chair Evidence Committee International Wound Infection Institute. Keryln is an active participate in the Wound Management Innovation CRC Program 3, which is an Australian funded research program. She sits on the Editorial Boards of WoundPractice & Research and the Journal of Stomal Therapy Australia. She was awarded the WA Health Life Time Achievement Award for Nursing in 2010.
Associate Professor Meera Agar is a Palliative Medicine Specialist, and Director of the Palliative Care Service at Braeside Hospital, HammondCare. She holds academic appointments with Flinders University and University of New South Wales. She is the clinical trial director for the Ingham Institute of Applied Medical Research, South West Sydney. She undertook her doctoral studies on the management of delirium at the end of life and is the Chief investigator for a randomised clinical trial exploring antipsychotics for the management of delirium in palliative care. She is the Australasian representative on the European Delirium Association Board. Her research interests include delirium in palliative care, palliative care for dementia and high grade glioma, and health services research.
Ms Annmarie Hosie is an experienced registered nurse with expertise in palliative and aged care. She has worked in co-ordination, consultancy and palliative care clinical trials roles. Annmarie is currently a PhD candidate within the School of Nursing, University of Notre Dame Australia, Sydney. The focus of her doctoral research - The DePAC study - is determining how palliative care nurses can better prevent, recognise and assess patients’ delirium, using knowledge translation as the conceptual framework.
Professor Elizabeth Lobb has established national and international research collaborations and pursued independent multi-disciplinary clinical collaborations in oncology, haematology, cancer genetics and palliative care for 15 years. This research has enhanced evidence based communication and psycho-social care across the cancer continuum from diagnosis, through treatment, remission and survivorship or relapse, palliative care and bereavement support for families and caregivers. She has worked clinically as a bereavement counsellor for many years. Her research interests include the communication of prognosis in metastatic cancer, doctor/patient communication, the needs of patients with high grade gliomas and their carers, bereaved carers of women with ovarian cancer, couple communication on end of life issues and persistent grief disorder.
2012 | Melbourne
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The PCNA 2012 Biennial Conference was held at the Sebel Albert Park in Melbourne on December 10 and 11, 2012.