Better Mental Health for Older People
IPA - Bulletin - Volume 18, Number 2 - Editor's Note

IPA Bulletin

Editor's Note
Back in the Saddle

David J. Ames

It is a pleasure to return to my editorial duties after six months in which John O’Brien so capably held the fort while I carried out my responsibilities as chair of the organizing committee for the Lorne IPA/Faculty of Psychiatry of Old Age of the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists (FPOA RANZCP) joint regional meeting. John has set a very high standard in both style and content that I will strive to maintain in this and the next three issues. I know I speak for all members of IPA in thanking John for his superb efforts.


The IPA has now embarked on the process of selecting my successor, who will take over to produce the June 2002 and subsequent issues of  IPA Bulletin. It is hoped that the publications committee will be able to make a clear recommendation to the Board of Directors in Nice, so as to give the new appointee plenty of time to settle into the role before producing that June issue. The position is open to any member of IPA and, if you are interested or wish to nominate a colleague, please contact me or Diane Nickolson at the IPA Secretariat. All expressions of interest and initial nominations will be treated in confidence. There is a bit of work involved in the post, but I have found it an enjoyable and fulfilling task these last four and a half years.


This issue sees something of a change in direction and personnel. Dottie Zoller, who did so much to develop the  IPA Bulletin with me when working at IPA, kindly helped out as managing editor in her capacity as an external consultant in the months after she left IPA while the secretariat was recruiting new staff. Now that the secretariat is fully staffed again (see article else-where in this issue), production and editorial functions have been brought back “in-house” under the direction of Diane Nickolson.


Following a process of proposal submissions and confidential bids, IPA has changed designer and printer in line with its policy of competitive bidding for all out-sourced operations. I would like to take this opportunity to thank not only Dottie, but also Don Mastri and Batson Press our former designer and printer for the job they have done over the past few years and for their roles in enhancing what was already an excellent product when I took it over in late 1996.


You can read about the Lorne meeting in Tom Dening’s very generous article a few pages on. I would just like to thank International Conference Management Services, led by the superbly efficient and personable Sarah Markey-Hamm, for their highly successful role in organizing the meeting. My secretary Yvonne Liddicoat worked her heart out on Lorne for four years, and I am deeply indebted to my colleagues on the organizing committee, to whom I was able to delegate virtually all of the organizational responsibilities, leaving me to relax and enjoy the scientific and social program they had assembled. All the speakers kept to time and both rain and bushfires held off for the duration of the meeting. I just wish the surf had been a bit higher that week. We had 278 three-day registrants, 10 one-day registrants and recruited 75 new members for IPA. It looks as if the meeting returned a small surplus, which will be divided between IPA and FPOA RANZCP. I am relieved that we neither made a loss, nor did we set the registration fee too high! On now to Nice where Philippe Robert is arranging an exciting Congress in a brilliant locale.


I have a few ambitions for the next three issues of  IPA Bulletin. I would love to have more submissions for our “Religions of the World” series and cherish the hope of being able to publish something on social work and occupational therapy before I finish up. There continues to be space for accounts of your personal enthusiasms, while James Lindesay needs more recipes sent to him for inclusion. The first section of a three-part history of the early days of IPA by Sandy Finkel is included in this issue and will continue in September and December as we build up to our twentieth anniversary in 2002. Now would be a good time for any member to send in photos (return guaranteed) and reminiscences of IPA over two decades.


News of another related organization, the Pacific Rim College of Psychiatrists (PRCP), is promulgated in a piece by my colleague Bruce Singh, the incoming president of that outfit. PRCP will be holding a meeting in my beautiful park encircled hometown from 7-10 October and I commend both the meeting and the organization to those of you who live in countries that border the Pacific Ocean. In addition to our regular columns from the president, on recent advances, a recipe and our book and meeting lists, we also boast articles on cognitive behavioral therapy, UK higher training, IPA staff, board profiles, news items, a list of our excellent assistant editors (most of whom have pledged to contribute an additional article before December 2001!) and (my favorite) a poem by a Sydney-based colleague about her experiences coordinating a site for the Australia/New Zealand risperidone in behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia study. When I heard Lee-Fay Low present this at the end of her talk at our annual FPOA meeting in Sydney last year I knew it had to find a home within these pages!


A few changes of address need to be noted. My former office at Royal Park Hospital has ceased to function with the closure of that hospital and its replacement by smaller units in general hospitals around the northern and western suburbs of Melbourne. All mail for me should be addressed to: David Ames, Department of Psychiatry, 7th Floor, Charles Connibere Building, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, Vic 3050, Australia.


My secretary, Yvonne Liddicoat, is winding back her hours, prior to a well-earned retirement early in 2002. Already she is spending several hours a week with Amber, her gorgeous first grandchild. Yvonne can still be reached on email at y.liddicoat@medicine .unimelb.edu.au, by phone on +61 3 9342 2515 and by fax to +61 3 9387 9201, but will be at work only on Mondays from now until Christmas. My direct line email has changed to dames@unimelb.edu.au but the old one (d.ames@medicine.unimelb.edu.au) will work in parallel for a while yet.


Please send copy and attachments to Yvonne as she has the printer and I don’t!

David J. Ames, Editor of the IPA Bulletin, can be contacted at the Department of Psychiatry, 7th Floor, Charles Connibere Building, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, Vic 3050, Australia (tel: +61 3 9342 2515, fax: +61 3 9387 9201, e-mail: dames@unimelb.edu.au).

 

 

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David Ames

Reprinted from IPA Bulletin, Volume 18, Number 2


Copyright 2010 International Psychogeriatric Association