9th Southern Cross Australasian Travel and Tropical Medicine Conference
11-13 September 2026. Venue: InterContinental Brisbane, Australia
2026 Workshops
Workshops led by Industry Experts
This year there will be 10 workshops running throughout the conference. Workshops are included in full conference registration.
Travel Clinics: Common Problems with Practical Solutions
Overview
This interactive workshop explores common challenges encountered in travel clinic practice, with a focus on practical approaches to managing diverse traveller populations. Emphasis is placed on clinical decision-making, risk prioritisation and effective communication in real-world settings.
Participants will engage in facilitated discussion of common problems in travel medicine, followed by application through case-based scenarios involving high-risk/adventure travellers and mature travellers. The session aims to support clinicians in navigating complexity and uncertainty in travel health consultations.
Designing surveillance to support NTD elimination Workshop Summary
Disease elimination is often considered the destination for many neglected tropical disease (NTD) programs, but effective surveillance is crucial to map out how to get, and stay, there. Using lymphatic filariasis in the Pacific as a case study, this interactive session will explore surveillance challenges at different points in the elimination journey, from identifying the last remaining infections to designing sustainable post-elimination surveillance systems. Through practical scenarios and discussion, participants will explore how combining data from human and mosquito surveys with novel sampling designs and new technologies can support counties to achieve their long-term elimination goals.
Tropical Public Health Workshop Summary Coming Soon
Military Medicine Workshop Summary
Military members often fall into the category of high risk travellers going to exotic destinations and living under field conditions which increases their exposure to infectious diseases. Dr Leonard Brennan is currently with the Department of Foreign Affairs and will discuss his experience immunizing official Australians particularly as it applies to dengue viruses. Dr Rebecca Suhr is a medical officer at the Australian Defence Force Malaria and Infectious Disease Institute and will discuss recent experience with infectious diseases in deployed soldiers with an emphasis on scrub typhus. Prof G. Dennis Shanks will take an historical approach to pandemics and discuss sentinel events of public health importance.
Diving Medicine Workshop Summary
This will be an interactive workshop, with ample time for questions.
Dr John Lippman: (20min)
John Lippmann OAM. Chairman and CEO of the Australasian Diving Safety Foundation (ADSF)
He will speak about the most common causes of diving fatalities in Australia
Dr Ken Thistlethwaite: (20min)
Ken is GP Anaesthetist and until recently the Co-Director of the Diving and Hyperbaric Medicine Service at the Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital
He will discuss the pathophysiology of decompression illness and the use of the hyperbaric chamber in treating diving accidents.
Dr Catherine Meehan: (20min)
Cathy is a GP in Cairns with a special interest in Diving Medicine. She is also on the executive committee of South Pacific Underwater Medicine Society (SPUMS)
She will coordinate the workshop and discuss what is required when doing a fitness to scuba dive assessment. She will discuss the current standards for diving medicals available in Australia at present and the role of the South Pacific Underwater Medicine Society’s (SPUMS) in setting these.
There will be advice on the current diving medicine fitness courses available in Australia at present, and a preview to new exciting venture by ADSF and SPUMS, for providing easier access to medical fitness to scuba dive courses, coming up in the not-too-distant future.
Panel Question and Answers (30min)
These presentations will be followed by a panel discussion to provide ample opportunities for Q and A.
Melioidosis: From Soil to Sepsis Workshop Summary
Melioidosis is caused by the soil bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei, and is an important cause of sepsis. Most cases occur in northern Australia and in Asia, however the geographic boundaries are expanding due to improved laboratory detection, increasing rates of diabetes, environmental disturbance and climate change. This workshop will cover environmental, clinical and public health aspects of melioidosis, from soil to sepsis – and beyond.
The planned line-up is –
- Melioidosis 101 – Dr Josh Hanson
- Diagnosis of melioidosis: how not to miss the great mimicker – Dr Ella Meumann
- Treating melioidosis: trials and tribulations – Dr Simon Smith
- Public health investigation & response – Dr Jacqueline Murdoch
- Where the Burk lurks: B. pseudomallei in the environment – Dr Jeff Warner
Destination: Peru Workshop
Peru is one of South America’s most popular travel destinations, offering diverse experiences from high-altitude trekking in the Andes to rainforest expeditions in the Amazon.
This interactive workshop will explore key travel health issues relevant to travellers visiting Peru, using real-world cases and practical scenarios. Topics will include prevention and management of altitude illness, yellow fever vaccination and risk assessment, and approaches to complex travel medicine consultations.
Participants will gain practical insights into pre-travel risk assessment, vaccination decision-making, and management strategies for challenging traveller presentations, with opportunities for discussion and audience participation.



















