Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care

No time to waste for new Maternity Taskforce

Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation (Victorian Branch) 2 mins read

MONDAY 14 OCTOBER 2024

The Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation (Victorian Branch), with more than 6000 midwifery members, has welcomed the Allan Government’s decision to establish the Victorian Maternity Taskforce to focus on the complex challenges in our maternity and newborn services.

ANMF (Vic Branch) Assistant Secretary Madeleine Harradence said the midwifery workforce was still recovering and rebuilding from the difficult pandemic years and statewide reform was needed to ensure the viability of maternity services, particularly in rural and regional Victoria.

Research released in 2022 found that midwives moved from permanent to casual employment during the pandemic years for multiple reasons, which was impacting the ability to provide maternity services due to staffing shortfalls.

The La Trobe University School of Nursing and Midwifery conducted the initial study called ‘The FUSCHIA study: Future proofing the midwifery workforce in Victoria’ in 2021. ANMF has provided funding to support the longitudinal continuation of this study through to 2026, to better understand and respond to midwifery workforce wellbeing and retention over time.    

Ms Harradence said: ‘We look forward to contributing to the work of this critical taskforce through our Maternity Services Officer Nicole Allan, who is a midwife and deeply connected to our more than 6000 midwifery members and will ensure their voices are heard.

‘We know there are rostering, work/life balance, student employment and career path strategies and models of care that, if implemented, could better support and retain our passionate midwifery workforce. Our members want to work in a system that provides access, choice and flexibility to them and to women in their choice of maternity care, to enable safe woman-centred midwifery care.

‘Through recent public sector outcomes, improved ratios, and advocacy around continuity models, ANMF is doing everything within our power to improve the conditions for our midwifery members,’ she said.

‘Now we need to work with the government and the Department of Health to drive central, but nuanced reforms by introducing proven maternity models of care, inclusive of continuity of care models that enable midwives to work in a way that provides safe care to women and babies and brings immense professional satisfaction. The aim is for midwives to stay in the profession that they love,’ Ms Harradence said.

 


About us:

The ANMF (Vic Branch) has more than 105,000 members – nurses, midwives and aged care personal care workers – across the Victorian health and aged care sectors.


Contact details:

 Media contact: Robyn Asbury 0417 523 252 │ rasbury@anmfvic.asn.au

Media

More from this category

  • Disability, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 20/12/2024
  • 17:36
Kuremara

Kuremara to Open a State-of-the-Art Activity Center in Milton, QLD, in January 2025

Kuremara, a trusted and leading NDIS-registered provider in Australia, is excited to announce the opening of its newest facility—a cutting-edge activity center in Milton,…

  • Contains:
  • Legal, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 20/12/2024
  • 17:29
JGA Saddler

BREAKING NEWS: Australian law firm takes on Johnson & Johnson for selling Australians ineffective medicine

Vision available: Lawyer and doctor VNR, editorial photos and radio grabs included can be found in this SharePoint File In-person lawyer interviews available by…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 20/12/2024
  • 12:01
NDARC/UNSW

ADHD drug shows promise for treating methamphetamine dependence, landmark Australian study shows

A prescription medication used to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) could be repurposed as the first pharmacotherapy for people with methamphetamine dependence, according to a study published in Addiction. Results from the landmark ‘LiMA’ trial show that thepsychostimulant lisdexamfetamine can drastically reduce the need to use methamphetamine among those who are dependent on the illicit drug. Lead author and addiction medicine specialist Professor Nadine Ezard, who is Director of the National Centre for Clinical Research on Emerging Drugs (NCCRED), said the results were promising. "There is currently no pharmacotherapy approved for treating methamphetamine dependence," Professor Ezard said. “While further…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.