THE Public Hospitals Authority (PHA) is pleased to announce that Dr Caroline Burnett-Garraway has been appointed medical chief of staff for the Princess Margaret Hospital, which takes effect this month.
With more than two and half decades as a physician in the public health sector, Dr Burnett-Garraway brings a wealth of training and experience to her new position. A graduate of the University of the West Indies Faculty of Medical Sciences undergraduate and graduate programmes in Jamaica and Barbados, she began her medical career at the Princess Margaret Hospital in 1990 as a house officer.
Starting in 1999, Dr Burnett-Garraway served as senior registrar/assistant medical director in the Accident and Emergency Department, eventually serving as consultant, medical director and ultimately as chief of service for the department from 2014 to 2017. She also held the position of deputy medical chief of staff for the hospital from 2010 to 2013. In 2004, Dr Burnett-Garraway completed the Leadership Development for Physicians in Academic Health Centres programme at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston.
She has formerly held the position of chairman of the external disaster committee at PMH and served on the ambulatory care department management committee from 1994 - 1995. She sat on the continuing medical education committee at PMH from 1999 – 2000 and she continues to sit on the Accident and Emergency Department clinical management committee. She is also serving on the medical management/advisory committee at PMH for the second time, with her current term on the committee beginning in 2010 until the present.
In addition to her clinical and administrative experience, Dr Burnett-Garraway is a respected medical lecturer, and holds the post of associate lecturer in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of the West Indies – School of Clinical Medicine & Research programme located at the Princess Margaret Hospital.
As medical chief of staff, Dr Burnett-Garraway is a member of the executive management committee, the administrative body responsible for efficient and effective management of the day-to-day operations of the nation’s largest hospital. In addition to direct patient care and on-call responsibilities as a consultant physician, in her new position she will also have oversight responsibility for the physician and allied health services of the hospital.
She is an accomplished musician having played violin with the Bahamas National Symphony Orchestra, the Bahamas National Chamber Ensemble, and the ever popular Strings ‘n Tings Quartet. She is married and has one daughter.
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