MUDRIH’s Jane Taylor retires

Quite a ride: some of the Gippsland Regional Interprofessional Partnership in Simulation (GRIPS) team farewell Jane. L-R Katie Yeomans, Mollie Burley, Sue Townsend, Kerry Bell, Jane Taylor, Kaytlyn Eaton.

Quite a ride: some of the Gippsland Regional Interprofessional Partnership in Simulation (GRIPS) team farewell Jane. L-R Katie Yeomans, Mollie Burley, Sue Townsend, Kerry Bell, Jane Taylor, Kaytlyn Eaton.

MUDRIH staff farewelled Jane Taylor at a morning tea in February. Jane has been an Education Lecturer with MUDRIH since 2006 when she first combined private practice as a speech pathologist with part-time lecturing.

She said that she has had “quite a ride” as an academic with Monash and it had been exciting to be part of the development of interprofessional practice in community health in Gippsland. She added that one outstanding honour was the acceptance accorded her at Ramahyuck District Aboriginal Corporation.

“Every one of my colleagues have inspired me along the way, and I have never felt alone,” she said. She was “overwhelmed with all the warm wishes” and promised to keep in touch.

In her retirement, Jane and her husband intend doing some extensive travels in their motor home.

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