Growing Our Own Rural, Remote and Aboriginal Health Workforce: Contributions made, approaches taken and lessons learnt by three rural Australian academic health departments

Author:

Naden Kathryn1,Hampton Denise2,Walke Emma3ORCID,Pavlovic Susan Parker3,Graham Siobahn4,Jones Debra2

Affiliation:

1. School of Rural Health (Dubbo/Orange), Faculty of Medicine and Health The University of Sydney Dubbo New South Wales Australia

2. Broken Hill University Department of Rural Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health The University of Sydney Broken Hill New South Wales Australia

3. University Centre of Rural Health Lismore, Faculty of Medicine and Health, Honorary Associate Public Health The University of Sydney Lismore New South Wales Australia

4. PARVAN Kids & Families Branch, Integrated Care Directorate Western New South Wales Local Health District Dubbo NSW Australia

Abstract

AbstractAimsThis paper describes the investments made, approaches taken and lessons learnt by three rural Australian academic health departments engaged in the delivery of the Health Career Academy Program (HCAP). The program seeks to address the under‐representation of rural, remote and Aboriginal populations within Australia's health workforce.ContextSignificant resources are directed towards rural practice exposure for metropolitan health students to address workforce shortages. Fewer resources are directed towards health career strategies that focus on the earlier engagement of rural, remote and Aboriginal secondary school students, those in Years 7–10. Best practice career development principles highlight the importance of earlier engagement in the promotion of health career aspirations and in influencing secondary school student career intentions and uptake of health professions.ApproachThis paper describes: delivery contexts; the theory and evidence that has informed the HCAP; program design, adaptability and scalability; program focus on priming the rural health career pipeline; program alignment to best practice career development principles; enablers and barriers confronted in program delivery, and lessons learnt to inform rural health workforce policy and resourcing.ConclusionThere is a need to invest in programs that seek to attract rural, remote and Aboriginal secondary school students to health professions if Australia is to develop a sustainable rural health workforce. A failure to invest earlier undermines opportunities to engage diverse and aspiring youth in Australia's health workforce. Program contributions, approaches and lessons learnt can inform the work of other agencies seeking to include these populations in health career initiatives.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Family Practice,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference25 articles.

1. KBC Australia.Independent evaluation of the Rural Health Multidisciplinary Training Program: final report to the Commonwealth Department of Health.2020[cited 2022 Apr 8]https://www.health.gov.au/sites/default/files/documents/2021/10/evaluation‐of‐the‐rural‐health‐multidisciplinary‐training‐rhmt‐program‐final‐report_0.pdf

2. Opting for rural practice: the influence of medical student origin, intention and immersion experience

3. Destinations of nursing and allied health graduates from two Australian universities: A data linkage study to inform rural placement models

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