Michael Tam
Dr Michael Tam is a clinical academic Specialist General Practitioner, combining the provision of family medicine, research, health services development, and governance. Michael’s clinical interest is in the whole-person primary care of people living with mental illness. He is actively involved in mental health policy, strategy, and governance, with local, state, and national bodies. Michael’s research is in integrated care and preventive care in general practice. He has expertise in both qualitative and quantitative research methods.
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Recent Posts
- Development and pilot testing of the Population And ContExt adaption of decision aids (PACE) framework
- Heavy drinkers’ expectations and experiences when discussing alcohol use during a general practice visit in Australia: A qualitative study
- RACGP Future Leaders Program 2023 Breakfast Oration
- Multifaceted intervention to increase the delivery of alcohol brief interventions in primary care: a mixed-methods process analysis
- General practitioners’ perspectives regarding early developmental surveillance for autism within the australian primary healthcare setting: a qualitative study
- Parental experience of an early developmental surveillance programme for autism within Australian general practice: a qualitative study
- Supporting conversations about medicines and deprescribing: GPs’ perspectives on a Medicines Conversation Guide
- Melanoma risk assessment and management: a qualitative study among Australian GPs
- Watch me grow integrated (WMG-I): protocol for a cluster randomised controlled trial of a web-based surveillance approach for developmental screening in primary care settings
- Myth-busting: role of the GP in primary mental health care
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Dec 05 2011
Is it ethical for medical practitioners to prescribe alternative and complementary treatments that may lack an evidence base?
Tam CWM. Is it ethical for medical practitioners to prescribe alternative and complementary treatments that may lack an evidence base? [Letter] Med J Aust 2011; 195(11): 660-661
This was a Letter to the Editor published in the Medical Journal of Australia.
DOI: 10.5694/mja11.11333
The article is in PDF format and hosted by Google Drive.
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