Recommended reading 1.10

Recommended reading Ten principles of good interdisciplinary team work (Nancarrow et al., 2013) Links may expire – If you find any links are not working, please let us know via info@lifestylemedicine.org.au.

Learning outcomes 1.10

Compare and contrast the difference between a multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary team Describe how to work in an interdisciplinary team effectively List examples of specific interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary models Relate experiences of working in interdisciplinary and/or multidisciplinary teams. Lessons learned: What worked well? What did not work? What can be improved?

Presentation references 1.9

Arnold, D. (2018). Lifestyle Medicine and professional practice. Retrieved from https://lifestylemedicine.org.au/content/lifestyle-medicine-and-professional-practice/ Goodyear-Smith, F. A., Warren, J., Bojic, M., & Chong, A. (2013). eCHAT for Lifestyle and Mental Health Screening in Primary Care. Annals of Family Medicine, 11(5), 460-466. doi:10.1370/afm.1512 Kayata, E. (2019). Are physicians ethically obliged to prescribe lifestyle changes? Retrieved from https://www.cancernetwork.com/ethics-oncology/are-physicians-ethically-obliged-prescribe-lifestyle-changes Mathioudakis, A., […]

Presentation 1.9

Presented by Dr Sam Manger, MBBS (MD), BSc, FRACGP, FASLM, Medical Educator Download the slides for this presentation here: Professional role, your scope of practice, ethics and record-keeping Presentation

Required and recommended reading 1.9

Required reading How to keep good clinical records (Mathioudakis et al., 2016) Lifestyle Medicine: an overview (Relias Media, 2010) Lifestyle Medicine and professional practice (Arnold, 2018) Recommended reading Codes, Guidelines and Policies (for your relevant profession) (Medical Board of Australia, 2020) eCHAT for lifestyle and mental health screening in primary care (Goodyear-Smith et al., 2013) […]

Learning outcomes 1.9

Recall working within your scope of practice as an LM practitioner Summarise ethical considerations, e.g.: obligation to offer the patient the best treatment according to the latest medical science, clinical judgement, patient preference Demonstrate the record-keeping requirements of LM practice

Presentation references 1.8

Barnard, N. D. (2013). The physician’s role in nutrition related disorders: From bystander to leader. AMA Journal of Ethics, 15(4), 367-372. doi:10.1001/virtualmentor.2013.15.4.oped1-1304 beyondblue. (2013). National Mental Health Survey of Doctors and Medical Students. Hawthorne, Vic: beyondblue. Retrieved from http://www.beyondblue.org.au/docs/default-source/default-document-library/bl1132-report—nmhdmss-full-report_web.pdf Bleich, S. N., Bennett, W. L., Gudzune, K. A., & Cooper, L. A. (2012). Impact of […]

Presentation 1.8

Presented by Dr Sam Manger, MBBS (MD), BSc, FRACGP, FASLM, Medical Educator Download the slides for this presentation here: Practitioner’s personal behaviour and role modelling Presentation

Required and recommended reading 1.8

Required reading Physician disclosure of healthy personal behaviors improves credibility and ability to motivate (Frank et al., 2000) Recommended reading Views and attitudes towards physical activity and nutrition counselling in general practice: National survey report 2019 (RACGP, 2019) The physician’s role in nutrition-related disorders: From bystander to leader (Barnard, 2013) Impact of physician BMI on […]

Learning outcomes 1.8

Explain the role of personal behaviour and role modelling: practitioner attitudes and patient behaviour change and health outcomes List scientific data supporting that physicians who practice healthy lifestyles are more likely to offer counselling and improve patient outcomes Relate how hard it is for us to personally change: this will help us understand the difficulties […]

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LM26 CONFERENCE

EARLY BIRD ON SALE NOW

Join us in Hobart for our annual Lifestyle Medicine conference as we explore how green and blue spaces, social connection, and the six pillars of Lifestyle Medicine can transform clinical and community care.

Register before 30 June 2026 to secure the last chance at a discount