Duration
6 months part time
Mode (Location)
On campus (Parkville)
Intake
January
Key dates
Key dates
Fees
AUD $10,248 (2026 indicative first year fee). Commonwealth Supported Places (CSPs) are not available
Learn more
Learn more
Course structure
Overview
What will you learn?
In this program you will develop key problem-solving skills and expertise in this specialist area, including logistical and clinical prevention, planning, response, recovery and policy development. You will also gain an understanding of domestic and international factors involved in the management of these events.
The course is delivered online, with two, two-day face-to-face workshops (4 days in total) involving practical exercises and simulation activities. Led by internationally renowned experts from a range of backgrounds, in this practical component you will apply your newly acquired integrated knowledge to solving problems in various simulated disaster situations. This includes active shooter mass casualty simulations, drill exercises and hazardous materials training. It is highly recommended students attend campus for these workshops, but they may attend virtually.
On completion of this course, you will be able to:
- Recognise and apply disaster and terror medicine and health management principles, considering the various health systems and challenges in managing disaster incidents and countering terrorism
- Analyse the factors that underpin level of organisational response and the principles that are applied to prevent, manage, contain and diffuse the impact of disasters in clinical settings
- Devise methods to address the complex physical and psychological factors involved in after care and recovery post event
- Develop creative and flexible problem-solving, communication skills for unique crisis situations, in a range of environmental, geographic and often dangerous settings
- Evaluate the clinical and health service design and implementation processes for prevention, planning, responding and managing disaster and terror events
- Critically assess the clinical and health service risk and the impact of disaster and terror events.
Workload
This course can be completed in six months of part-time study.
The expected workload is approximately 20 hours per week, including all readings and assessments.
Teaching dates for face-to-face workshops
| Subject | Teaching dates |
|---|---|
| Disaster Medicine Principles and Responses (MEDI90107) | 14 & 15 March 2026 |
| Terror Medicine Principles and Responses (MEDI90108) | 28 & 29 November 2026 |
Explore this course
Explore the subjects you could choose as part of this certificate.