Surgical News volume 22 issue 2 Embracing diversity

Page 24

24

New Zealand

College Name Change Working Group The Aotearoa New Zealand National Committee recently requested that RACS Council consider updating the College name to better reflect the binational nature of the College, and where its members come from – Australia and New Zealand. Councillor Andrew Hill has assembled a working group to discuss options, which will then be put to Council for consideration and potentially a vote by the Fellowship in the future. The group represents a wide cross-section of the College from both nations, including senior surgeons, Councillors from both countries, a Younger Fellow, a Trainee, and both New Zealand and Australian Indigenous representatives. The College of Surgeons of Australasia was founded in 1927, and the Exordium specifically refers to ‘Australasia, which includes New Zealand’. In 1930, King George V granted permission for the prefix ‘Royal’ to be used, and the name was changed to the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons in 1931. At this time, the ‘Journal of the College of Surgeons of Australasia, which includes New Zealand’, changed its name to the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Surgery, suggesting the term ‘Australasia’ was not clear to all even then.

Over time, the term ‘Australasia’ has become less prevalent. Its meaning is not clearly defined, and some definitions include Melanesia and wider Oceania. The word ‘Australasia’ is not well understood, particularly by those outside New Zealand and Australia, but even amongst our own Fellows and Trainees. It is often mistakenly written or spoken as ‘Australian’, even in our own College documents. A web search brings up an Australian Government Department of Health document with the heading ‘Royal Australian College of Surgeons’; references to several surgeons with an ‘Australian Fellowship of the College of Surgeons’; and to the ‘Royal Australian College of Surgeons training program’. Meanwhile, surgeons and surgical organisations from other countries often interpret Australasia to include Asia. This means that the strength and unity of the binational nature of our College is not always recognised. New Zealanders have always been active participants in our College’s activities from formation. While there is generally open internal recognition of this and of the College’s binational status, externally this is often not apparent. A number of other medical colleges and surgical specialist associations use ‘Australia and New

Zealand’, for example, the Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists. There have been a number of occasions when the issue of changing the College name has been raised, in particular by the New Zealand Fellowship. A referendum of all Fellows on the College name was held in 2007, with 57 per cent of respondents voting to change the College name to the ‘Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Surgeons’. This fell short of the 75 per cent required at the time to change the Articles of Association (no longer applicable; since replaced by the Constitution). In contemporary process, the Australian Corporations Act requires a special resolution passed by members, with the support of at least 75 per cent of votes cast, to change a company name. The Aotearoa New Zealand National Committee believes it is time to revisit this matter and to propose to all Fellows a change in name. Dr Nicola Hill FRACS Dr Rachelle Love FRACS College Name Change Working Group


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

In memoriam

3min
page 53

The American College of Surgeons in Australia and New Zealand

1min
page 46

RACS welcomes new draft road safety strategy

2min
page 46

Pearls of wisdom from my surgical mentors

6min
pages 44-45

Oscar Clayton: surgeon and socialite (1816-1892)

6min
pages 42-43

Western Australian election ends in landslide

2min
page 36

Use of name Aotearoa in New Zealand

3min
page 25

Embracing diversity

1min
page 9

Foundation for Surgery

7min
pages 54-56

Case note review

3min
pages 48-49

A glance at Archibald Watson’s surgical diary

3min
pages 50-51

Good reading

1min
pages 52-53

Potential game changer in the management of high-risk prostate cancer

2min
page 37

Operating on the cutting edge

4min
pages 40-41

Who should use the title ‘surgeon’?

3min
page 47

Global Health at the RACS ASC

4min
pages 38-39

Embracing diversity through POSTVenTT

1min
page 29

JDocs: five years of preparing aspiring surgeons and proceduralists

5min
pages 34-36

Bringing progressive microsurgery to Australian hospitals

2min
page 33

Hearing care for all: World Hearing Week in Samoa

3min
pages 30-32

College Name Change Working Group

2min
page 24

Introducing our New Zealand surgical advisors

6min
pages 27-28

Professor Wood talks about her work

7min
pages 22-23

President’s perspective

5min
pages 4-5

RACS complaints process updated

5min
pages 6-7

International Women’s Day at RACS

4min
pages 10-11

The two of us

6min
pages 18-19

Australia’s first female paediatric surgeon

4min
pages 20-21

Full steam ahead for the RACS ASC

2min
pages 8-9

Voices from the Pacific

5min
pages 12-13

It’s a great life out there!

13min
pages 14-17
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Surgical News volume 22 issue 2 Embracing diversity by RACSCommunications - Issuu