Do you have ACEM Portal login credentials?
More is not always better when it comes to healthcare. Choosing Wisely Australia®
A new series of journal articles highlighting the experiences of emergency care practitioners in the Pacific Region during COVID-19 have been launched.
Waiting rooms are full, ambulances are ramped and emergency department staff are experiencing burnout.
The ACEM Aotearoa NZ Emergency Medicine Conference is heading to Whakatū, Nelson from Wednesday 25 to Friday 27 March 2026, and we’re inviting FACEMs and ACEM trainees across all of Aotearoa to join the Working Group behind this event.
EDMH is a purpose built website that houses guidelines, articles, tools and resources to assist ED staff in increasing their competence and confidence in assessing and managing patients who present with mental health issues.
ACEM seeks to form collaborative partnerships with healthcare industry organisations, societies, and colleges to continually strive for a higher level of patient care.
Emergency doctors are calling for appropriately trained security staff to be posted 24-hours a day in every emergency department (ED), and for other measures to protect and restore the nation’s struggling EDs and staff – and get more patients the healthcare they need.
"Mātauranga Māori" is a contemporary term that describes the knowledge system that includes Māori cultural values, traditions, philosophies, and worldviews.
This policy outlines the underlying principles, philosophies and strategies to meet the emergency health care needs of people who identify as LGBTQIA+ISB in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand.
This Policy aims to promote discussion and awareness of end-of-life care (EoLC) planning, and to ensure that emergency department (ED) staff are confident in providing quality EoLC. The Policy also describes ED systems and processes for recognising and appropriately caring for patients at the end of life (EoL).