top of page
CF 2025 Leaderboard Banner.png
8527 - FN Telegraph (1200 x 628 px) (1920 x 640 px) (728 x 180 px).png
UQ sets ambitious target to increase First Nations doctors in Central Queensland

[supplied by UQ}

Regional-medical-pathway.jpg

The Regional Medical Pathway allows students to remain in their communities while they study. Image: supplied by UQ

LATEST NEWS

Kaurna-Day.jpg

First Nations language celebrated at Kaurna Day with new songbook [supplied by Uni of Adelaide] The University of Adelaide and University of South Australia communities have come together to celebrate the University of Adelaide’s second annual Kaurna Day, this year marked by the launch of a Kaurna songbook — a valuable resource for preserving and revitalising the Kaurna language.

Aboriginal-families-and-NSW-police-at-the-Inverell.jpg

Aboriginal families considering formal complaint after they were forced to leave an Inverell pool by police [Dan Butler, NITV] A father says he will continue to pursue accountability for an incident that allegedly saw Aboriginal families in northern New South Wales racially targeted by staff at a local pool.

Closing-the-Gap-targets.jpg

Disturbing Closing the Gap report shows there’s been little political will to address inequality in the wake of the failed Voice referendum [Isabella Higgins, ABC] Indigenous incarceration rates have climbed, suicide rates and out-of-home care rates are getting worse, while the aspiration for healthy baby birth weights has also slipped off track.

UQ Vice-Chancellor Professor Deborah Terry AC said the First Nations Growth Strategy would help to accelerate the supply of medical graduates in Central Queensland communities experiencing shortages.

“We are deeply committed to ensuring more Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander doctors graduate through the program to address the very real workforce need for First Nations clinicians,” Professor Terry said.

“This strategy is a vehicle for change and has been co-designed with First Nations Elders in partnership with Bidgerdii Community Health Service to deliver on this as part of the University’s Queensland Commitment.”

The Regional Medical Pathway allows students to study in their communities and is a collaboration involving UQ, Central Queensland University (CQU), Central Queensland Hospital and Health Service (CQHHS) and the Wide Bay Hospital and Health Service (WBHHS).

Director of UQ Medical School’s Rural Clinical SchoolProfessor Riitta Partanen, said the purpose of the First Nations Growth Strategy was to create a locally centred, Indigenous-led focus on the recruitment, retention and graduation of First Nations medical students, with a specific focus on Central Queensland.

“We want to ensure they are supported before, during and after their graduation in a true end-to-end pathway and establish medical professionals with an authentic connection to the region,” Professor Partanen said.

Associate Dean (Indigenous Engagement) Professor Thelma Parker said the strategy was centred around unlocking growth for Indigenous doctors through community centred partnerships.

“The strategy was led by the UQ-developed Wisdom Council for Indigenous Knowledges and Bidgerdii Community Health Service, an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community controlled primary health care service,” Professor Parker said.

“Local community perspectives were centred, and the plan was signed off by 14 community Elders to ensure it is fully culturally appropriate and owned by the community.

“It’s this collaboration that will ensure its success.

“This is really important as we work towards closing the gap and ensuring the community is fully aware of the various pathways into medicine and the opportunities that are available for students to study and work in their local communities,” she said.

In 2023, UQ successfully applied for funding to support 10 additional Commonwealth-funded places in Central Queensland in the Doctor of Medicine program, and the 15 per cent target was part of the agreement.

The growth strategy is designed to ensure First Nations students have support throughout the whole process, from applying and meeting the entry requirements for Central Queensland University’s Bachelor of Medical Science (Pathway to Medicine) and UQ’s Doctor of Medicine, through to graduation and beyond.

WAfines.jpg
bottom of page