Doctors in Training 2026 - Registrar - General & Acute Care Medicine - Royal Hobart HospitalDate published: Jul 2, 2024, 14:11 PMLocationDescriptionThe RHH offers services in all major medical and surgical specialties including a newly established trauma service as well as ICU, CCU, extensive burns treatment unit, hyperbaric medicine unit, acute stroke unit, psychiatry, obstetrics & gynaecology, and paediatrics.The Department of General and Acute Care Medicine is the largest inpatient medical unit at the RHH. We have on average 60-80 inpatients and admit approximately 15 to 20 per day across 4 Acute Medical teams including a Rapid Assessment Medical Unit (RAMU).Our medical registrar positions provide opportunities for those seeking RACP-accredited Basic Physician Training. We pride ourselves on a strong BPT training programme supported by our Directors of Physician Education and by physicians throughout the hospital with a strong commitment to supporting trainees through exam preparations.We have recently restructured and strengthened our BPT teaching program to further optimise support for our trainees. The BPT trainees get 5 hours of “paid” teaching time per week according to the new award established this year.Salary - $134,930 - $189,005 per annumPeriod of employment - Fixed-term, full-time day work, 76 hours plus 10 hours protected teaching time (pro rata) per fortnight, effective 2 February 2026 – 1 February 2027. Note: a 24-month appointment may be negotiated for suitable applicants.General or limited registration with the Medical Board of AustraliaCurrent Working with Children Registration (where applicable and as determined by individual position requirements).We acknowledge and pay respect to the Traditional Custodians and Elders — past, present and emerging — of the lands and waters on which RACP members and staff live, learn and work. RACP acknowledges Māori as tangata whenua and Te Tiriti o Waitangi partners in Aotearoa New Zealand.Find out more about our commitment to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and Māori health equity.
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