Milch, Vivienne_ square

Prof Vivienne Milch

Medical Director, Cancer Australia; Medical Advisor, Australian Government Department of Health, Disability and Ageing; Chair, Expert Advisory Group, National Lung Cancer Screening Program; Adjunct Clinical Associate Professor, School of Medicine, The University of Notre Dame Australia (Sydney Campus); Professorial Fellow, Caring Futures Institute, Flinders University
Professor Vivienne Milch is Medical Director at Cancer Australia. Professor Milch is also Medical Advisor to the Australian Commonwealth Government Department of Health, Disability and Ageing on cancer screening policy and Chair of the Expert Advisory Group overseeing the new National Lung Cancer screening Program. Vivienne holds a Master’s degree in Health Policy and is an Adjunct Clinical Associate Professor in the School of Medicine, Sydney Campus at The University of Notre Dame, Australia and Professorial Fellow at the Caring Futures Institute at Flinders University in Adelaide.Prior to joining Cancer Australia, Professor Milch was a General Practitioner and clinical researcher at the Garvan Institute of Medical Research, Sydney.

More from this expert

Prof Vivienne Milch explains how Australia’s new lung cancer screening program aims to detect the disease earlier, and how GPs are central to making it work.

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Last chance - $155 special ends midnight Sunday!

This is your last chance to secure discounted registration to both national seminars before prices increase on Monday! You're invited to attend Australia's most popular seminars for GPs and healthcare professionals.

Upcoming Healthed Webcast

POTS – What You Need to Know

Tuesday 17th February, 7pm - 9pm AEDT

Speaker

Prof Dennis Lau

Cardiac Electrophysiologist; The Royal Adelaide Hospital; Clinical Professor, The University of Adelaide

Hear the latest evidence-based management options for POTS - a common, yet poorly recognised and misunderstood autonomic dysfunction condition in our community. Join Prof Dennis Lau for an update on POTS, who is at risk, presenting symptoms and how it can be diagnosed in the primary care setting.