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National promises new med school to ease workforce crisis

Author
Thomas Coughlan, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Wed, 5 Jul 2023, 11:32am
Photo / NZME
Photo / NZME

National promises new med school to ease workforce crisis

Author
Thomas Coughlan, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Wed, 5 Jul 2023, 11:32am

National has promised it will build a new medical school at the University of Waikato to deliver more doctors, and ease the health workforce crisis.

“Currently, New Zealand does not train enough doctors to meet the demands of our growing and ageing population, or to replace our retiring health workforce,” Luxon said.

“The health sector is experiencing a workforce crisis. Sick and injured New Zealanders are waiting hours in emergency departments, weeks to see a GP and months on surgical wait lists,” he said.

Luxon also promised to increase the number of medical school placements at Auckland and Otago by 50 from 2025. Luxon said this would be on top of the 50 extra places funded in the Budget.

“Together, this will see an additional 220 doctors graduating a year by 2030, compared to just 50 more under Labour’s plan,” Luxon said.

“This medical school should have been started five years ago as the previous National Government planned. Labour cancelled it in 2018 and their short-sightedness means we will have to continue to rely heavily on immigration to increase our doctor numbers in the short term,” he said.

National said the med school would cost $380m, with the Crown putting up $280m and $100m comign from Waikato University.

The additional places would cost $1.1m in 2024-25, then $3.2m in 2025-26, and $5.4m in 2027-28.

National said the new med-school would be “graduate only”. This means it would admit “students who have already completed a degree and allowing them to undertake four years of medical study (rather than the five required for undergraduates)”.

“Initially, the school will enrol 120 students, starting in 2027,” the policy document said.

“The programme will involve training at Waikato University for the first year and at training centres located in regional hospitals and larger community medical centres for the remaining three years.

“This model of training-in-place in the provinces will ensure a sustainable supply of primary care doctors committed to serving provincial, rural, and high-needs communities,” the policy document said.

More to come...

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