Honorary ANZCA fellows are given full library access and are allowed to use postnominals in a non-clinical capacity. They also are entitled to attend and speak at general meetings.
Honorary fellows may not vote, and are not required to completed continuing professional development activities. Read regulation 6 for full details on the process for conferring honorary ANZCA fellowship.
Past recipients
Year | Name | Location |
2021 | Lisbeth Ann Evered | Melbourne/New York |
2005 | Joan Margaret Sheales [dec] | Vic |
2001 | Archibald Ian Jeremy Brain | UK/Belgium |
1998 | Michael Gorton | Vic |
1996 | Emanuel M Papper [dec] | USA |
1995 | David Egmont Theile | Qld |
1994 | Michael Anthony Denborough [dec] | Vic |
1990 | Gaisford Gerald Harrison [dec] | South Africa |
1990 | Anthony John Jephcott [dec] | UK/NZ |
1989 | Lucien Ellis Morris [dec] | USA |
1989 | Carlos Parsloe [dec] | Brazil |
1986 | Gustav Julius Fraenkel [dec] | SA |
1984 | John Kevin Clarebrough [dec] | Vic |
1984 | John Francis Nunn | UK |
1984 | William Derek Wylie [dec] | UK |
1981 | David Gordon McDowall [dec] | UK |
1978 | Malcolm Keith Sykes [dec] | UK |
1977 | Geoffrey Kaye [dec] | Vic |
1977 | John Edmund Riding [dec] | UK |
1977 | Arthur Barclay Bull [dec] | South Africa |
1977 | Michael Douglas Alan Vickers [dec] | UK |
1976 | Dai Davies [dec] | UK |
1976 | Alistair Campbell McEachern [dec] | SA |
1976 | Kenneth Bryn Thomas [dec] | UK |
1976 | Douglas Geoffrey Lampard [dec] | Vic |
1973 | Mary Taylor Burnell [dec] | SA |
1973 | Alfred Norman Slater [dec] | NZ |
1973 | NSW | |
1971 | Margaret McClelland [dec] | Vic |
1968 | James Gordon Robson [dec] | UK |
1963 | Gordon Jackson Rees [dec] | UK |
1961 | Thomas Cecil Gray [dec] | UK |
1959 | William Woolf Mushin [dec] | UK |
1956 | Robert Reynolds Macintosh [dec] | NZ/UK |
1956 | Geoffrey Stephen William Organe [dec] | UK |
1956 | John Gillies [dec] | UK |
1954 | Mark Cowley Lidwill [dec] | NSW |
1953 | Bernard Richard Millar Johnson [dec] | UK |
Related resources
This regulation defines the pathways to ANZCA fellowship: honorary fellowship, assessment-based admission (for specialist international medical graduates), and completion of the ANZCA vocational training program.
Explore our other awards and prizes
The five ANZCA Council Awards recognise the most significant and extraordinary contributions (clinical and non-clinical) made by our fellows, trainees, and SIMGs.
Awarded to the candidate who has reached the highest marks in the ANZCA primary examination.
The Cecil Gray Prize is awarded to the ANZCA trainee who achieves the highest marks in the ANZCA final exam.
The Barbara Walker Prize for Excellence in the Pain Medicine Examination recognises the candidate who achieves the highest mark in the FPM fellowship examination. It is awarded to the top student at the discretion of the Court of Examiners.
Candidates who achieve a mark in the top 10 per cent in the FPM fellowship exam are eligible for inclusion in the merit list.
Awarded to the fellow judged to make the best contribution to the free research paper session named the Gilbert Brown Prize Session at the ANZCA Annual Scientific Meeting (ASM).
Awarded to the ANZCA trainee (or fellow, within one year of fellowship) who is judged to have made the best contribution at the Trainee Academic Session held as part of the ANZCA Annual Scientific Meeting.
The FPM Dean's Prize recognises the FPM fellow or trainee judged to have presented the most original pain medicine/pain research paper, of sufficient standard, at the free papers session of the ANZCA Annual Scientific Meeting.
Awarded for original work judged to be the best contribution to the FPM free papers session at the ANZCA Annual Scientific Meeting.
The undergraduate prize in pain medicine is awarded to the best medical student in pain medicine in either of the final two years of undergraduate medical training.
Named after Dr Ray Hader, a Victorian ANZCA trainee who died of an accidental drug overdose in 1998 after a long struggle with addiction, this award promotes compassion and a focus on the welfare of anaesthetists, other colleagues, patients and the community.
Awarded to practitioners who have demonstrated a significant contribution to medical education (in anaesthesia or pain medicine), including, but not limited to, ANZCA and FPM Fellows and academic experts.
In recognition of the significant contributions of Professor Michael J Cousins FANZCA, FFPMANZCA to the field of pain medicine and his initiative to establish the Faculty of Pain Medicine, the faculty plenary session at the college's annual scientific meeting was named the Michael Cousins Lecture.
Awarded for outstanding achievement in anaesthesia within the Masters of Medicine program at the School of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Papua New Guinea.
Awarded to the candidate with the best overall performance to go into the Masters of Medicine program at the School of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Papua New Guinea.
Awarded to the medical student with the best overall performance in the anaesthesia module of the School of Medicine and Health Sciences of the University of Papua New Guinea.