Specialty overview
Emergency medicine physicians are acute generalists with specialist skills in resuscitation and diagnosis during the acute phase of illness or injury. Utilising a broad range of procedural and technical skills, emergency medicine physicians assess and treat patients of all age groups who have a wide range of illnesses, including those patients who are suffering potentially life, or limb, threatening conditions. Common conditions treated by emergency physicians include; heart attacks, strokes, fractures, asthma attacks, injuries resulting from car crashes, pregnancy related emergencies, overdoses and behavioural
Clinical practice
Emergency medicine physicians work within both public and private facilities, playing a key role in trauma and retrieval teams and in the development of pre-hospital and in-hospital emergency medical systems. Emergency medicine physicians work closely with other important healthcare practitioners such as paramedics, nurses, social workers, physiotherapists, mental health clinicians and other doctors to ensure that patients passing through emergency departments receive the highest possible standard of care.
Key statistics
2026 QLD Training program selections(first year)
130
eligible
123
selected
Number of Queensland and Australian specialists
Number of Queensland and Australian new fellows
Number of Queensland trainees and average work hours
Information on specialists
-
Specialists over 60
This donut chart shows that 6% of specialists are aged over 60 years. -
Specialist intending to retire by 2034
This donut chart shows that 33% of 2024 workforce intend to retire by 2034. -
Location in QLD
This donut chart shows the percentage of specialists by their location: 26.1% are located in regional QLD, 71.6% are in major cities, and 2.3% are in remote areas. The chart highlights that a vast majority of specialists are based in major cities. -
Proportion Female/Male - QLD
58.9%
male41.1%
femaleThis doughnut chart shows the proportion of males and females. Males are 58.9%, Females are 41.1%. -
Public vs Private
16.8%
private83.2%
publicThis doughnut chart shows the proportion of public and private specialists. Private is 16.8, Public is 83.2%.
Information on trainees
-
Proportion female/male trainees in QLD
51%
male49%
femaleThis doughnut chart shows the proportion of males and females. Males are 51%, Females are 49%. -
2026 QLD Training program selections (first year)
130
eligible123
selectedThis doughnut chart shows the number of 2026 QLD Training Program Selections (First Year). 130 Eligible applications were received, 123 of those were selected.