Course coming late 2026. Register for $199 early bird pricing.
What's included
Access: Attend a one‑day intensive course, plus 12 months access to the Australian Med AI online lecture series after you complete the course. No subscriptions. No recurring fees.
Overview
The Australian Med AI Academy One‑Day Intensive Course is designed for healthcare professionals seeking a practical, clinically grounded introduction to artificial intelligence in healthcare. Content is developed and delivered by Australian clinical doctors with a focus on safe, ethical use of AI for disease prevention, early detection, and reducing preventable clinical deterioration.
Who's this for?
Doctors, nurses, midwives, paramedics, allied health, quality & safety leaders, clinical informatics/digital health professionals, health service managers, researchers, and policy stakeholders. No technical background required.
What you’ll learn (one‑day intensive)
- Clinical applications of AI for disease prevention and early detection
- Safety risks, bias, and common failure modes in clinical AI
- Governance, ethics, and clinician oversight in Australian clinical contexts
- Implementation fundamentals: evaluation, monitoring, escalation principles
Included after the course: Online Lecture Series (12 months)
- On‑demand lectures written/reviewed by Australian clinical doctors
- Case-based clinical scenarios and practical governance guidance
- Introductory explanations of AI performance concepts (non‑technical)
- Periodic updates aligned with evolving best practice
Certification
Certificate of participation provided. Content may support self‑recorded CPD documentation (where applicable).
Access terms
- One‑time payment provides access to the scheduled one‑day event
- Online lecture access begins after course completion and continues for 12 months
- Access is individual and non‑transferable
Important disclaimers
Educational content only. Not medical advice and not a substitute for clinical judgement, local policies, or specialist advice. Implementation outcomes depend on local governance and context.