Australia鈥檚 university representative body has proposed a shake-up of clinical placements for health students, as an already stretched medical workforce reels from coronavirus disruption.
In a change of tack from the customary demands for more higher education and research funding, Universities Australia (UA) has highlighted risks to the future health workforce in a submission recommending priorities for the 11 May federal budget.
The submission, which has been released publicly after being lodged with Treasury early this year, calls for a temporary 鈥渉ealth service placement adjustment package鈥 to tackle a Covid-induced backlog in clinical training.
The proposal sits alongside several relatively inexpensive or cost-free measures UA has requested from a budget聽that is not expected to yield much for the sector,聽after last year鈥檚 surprise allocation of an extra A$1 billion (拢560 million) in research funding.
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The submission says that while clinical placements always present 鈥渃hallenges鈥, Covid-19 has exacerbated them at the very time that the country needs more health workers to manage the vaccine roll-out, deliver 鈥渃atch-up鈥 treatments deferred during the pandemic, manage 鈥減ost Covid-19 syndrome鈥 and meet burgeoning needs for aged and disability care.
The submission says that the government should fund universities and community care providers to develop ways to 鈥渜uickly expand placement capacity鈥 outside hospitals.
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UA also wants funding for a 鈥渟coping study鈥 to explore ways for universities to share information about national security threats. This would help reduce the workload from a plethora of potentially 鈥渙verlapping鈥 regulatory regimes聽such as the Foreign Influence and Transparency Scheme, the new聽foreign relations act, the聽critical infrastructure bill聽and the proposed Commonwealth Integrity Commission.
The submission also requests the maintenance of聽visa flexibility measures聽introduced last year and a relaxation of work rules that limit international students鈥 freedom to accept stints of unpaid work experience. But it also includes big-ticket requests including another year鈥檚 鈥渟tabilisation funding鈥 for university research, extended transition funding for the聽Job-ready Graduates (JRG) package聽and direct support for private research and development.
UA chief executive Catriona Jackson said that while last year鈥檚 A$1 billion windfall had saved 鈥渃ritical research capacity鈥, more was needed. 鈥淚n a time of economic disruption, innovation and a productive skilled workforce become even more crucial to maintaining competitiveness and prosperity,鈥 she said.
Sources expected little from the budget, with the government pursuing longer-term reforms. An expert group advising on the commercialisation of university research, a personal priority of education minister Alan Tudge, is not expected to report until later in the year. 聽
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Submissions on a new international education strategy fall due the day after the budget, and the government has already outlined聽spending measures聽to relieve the ailing sector 鈥 with private colleges the primary beneficiaries.
Analyst Martin Foo said that the budget was unlikely to include new teaching grants so soon after the JRG changes, and significant extra research funding was doubtful following last year鈥檚 windfall.
But Mr Foo, of credit ratings agency S&P Global, said that universities could attract new infrastructure funding through schemes such as the聽聽and the聽.
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