Skip to content
Federal Election, Medical Health Aged Care

Quality Healthcare Shouldn’t Depend on your Postcode

Council of Presidents of Medical Colleges 2 mins read

Ahead of the December 6 Health Minister's Meeting, the Council of Presidents of Medical Colleges (CPMC) warned that the proposed fast-track registration of Specialist International Medical Graduates (SIMGs) risks exacerbating a two-tier healthcare system in which the quality of specialist care Australians receive could be determined by their postcode.

"As Health Ministers prepare to meet on December 6, 2024, we urge them to carefully consider the long-term implications of rushing registration processes and creating different standards for different regions," said A/Prof Sanjay Jeganathan. "The current proposal effectively creates two classes of specialist registration – one for metropolitan areas and another for everyone else."

The CPMC has highlighted concerns about the fast-tracking of international medical graduates:

- Reduced supervision requirements for newly registered international specialists under the new scheme

- Shortened assessment processes that will not fully evaluate clinical competency

- Limited oversight of the scope of practice in regional settings

- Insufficient support structures for international medical graduates in regional placements

- Lack of clear continuing professional development frameworks

- No clear mechanism to ensure international medical graduates go to areas of greatest need

"International medical graduates have long been vital to Australian healthcare, but they deserve proper support and assessment pathways that ensure they can practice to their full potential," said A/Prof Jeganathan. "Creating rushed registration processes doesn't help anyone –  not the communities they serve,  and certainly not the international specialists themselves."

The CPMC calls for Health Ministers to address:

1. Maintaining consistent specialist registration standards nationwide while improving the efficiency of current assessment pathways

2. Establishing adequately resourced support systems for international medical graduates in regional placements

3. Creating clear frameworks for supervision and scope of practice

4. Developing structured transition programs for international specialists

5. Implementing robust quality assurance measures for all registration pathways

6. Strengthening mechanisms to direct specialists to areas of genuine workforce shortage

"The promise to strengthen Medicare must not come at the cost of compromising our medical standards," said A/Prof Jeganathan. "We need sustainable solutions that support international specialists to meet our high standards, not shortcuts that risk patient safety and professional standards."

The CPMC and its member Colleges are keen to work with State and Federal Governments to safely implement this program and propose alternative solutions, including:

- Enhanced support and mentoring programs for international medical graduates via Specialist Medical Colleges

- Improved assessment efficiency without compromising standards

- Better integration of international medical graduates into existing specialist networks

- Structured professional development programs

"Every Australian deserves access to fully qualified specialists who meet our world-class standards," said A/Prof Jeganathan. "Creating different standards for different regions isn't the answer to our workforce challenges – and prior failed programs have shown it will exacerbate existing institutionalised inequality in healthcare delivery."

The CPMC urges Health Ministers to consider these issues carefully at their meeting. We remain committed to working with government stakeholders to develop solutions that maintain high standards while improving access to specialist care across all regions.

Key Facts:

The CPMC is concerned about:

- Reduced supervision requirements for newly registered international specialists under the new scheme

- Shortened assessment processes that will not fully evaluate clinical competency

- Limited oversight of the scope of practice in regional settings

- Insufficient support structures for international medical graduates in regional placements

- Lack of clear continuing professional development frameworks

- No clear mechanism to ensure international medical graduates go to areas of greatest need

About us:

The Council of Presidents of Medical Colleges (CPMC) is Australia's peak body representing specialist medical colleges. Find us at: www.cpmc.edu.au or Twitter: @CPMC_Aust

Contact details:

Contact: CPMC CEO

Email: ceo@cpmc.edu.au

Phone: 0438 822 663

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.