Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care

Palliative Care Australia backs calls to end placement poverty for medical and allied health students

Palliative Care Australia < 1 mins read

Palliative Care Australia (PCA) supports calls to expand the Commonwealth Prac Payment to include medical and allied health students, following the release of Parliamentary Budget Office costings commissioned by independent MP Dr Helen Haines and independent Senator David Pocock. 

The costings indicate the expansion would cost $290 million over the four years of the forward estimates.  

PCA National Policy Director Josh Fear said reducing financial hardship during placements is an important step for building the health workforce Australians rely on, including palliative care services. 

“Palliative care is delivered by multidisciplinary teams, and we need a strong pipeline of medical and allied health professionals to meet community need,” Mr Fear said. 

“When students are required to complete unpaid placements, it can force real financial stress and it can put completion of training at risk. 

“Expanding the Prac Payment to medical and allied health students is a practical, achievable reform that supports equity and strengthens the workforce, particularly in rural and regional areas.” 

The Commonwealth Prac Payment commenced on 1 July 2025 for nursing, midwifery, teaching and social work students, and Dr Haines and Senator Pocock are urging the payment be expanded in line with the Universities Accord Final Report.  

Their announcement coincides with survey data from the Health Students Alliance showing 42 per cent of students went hungry while on placement.  

Palliative Care Australia calls on the Australian Government to expand the Prac Payment to medical and allied health students so placements do not become a barrier to qualifying, and ultimately so patients and families can access timely care when they need it. 


About us:

Palliative Care Australia is the national peak body for palliative care.


Contact details:

Contact Greg Kimball in the PCA communication team on 0413 160 333 or email [email protected] and [email protected] 

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 06/03/2026
  • 19:10
Claritas HealthTech Ltd

Claritas iPET(TM) Approved by Australia TGA to Supply the Medical Software Device for Image Processing Enabling Diagnostic Quality Images from Short Scan Time and/or Low Dose PET, PET-CT/MRI Scans

LONDON and SYDNEY, March 06, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Claritas NucMed Technologies Ltd (Claritas), a healthcare technology company specializing in state-of-the-art image enhancement, noise reduction, segmentation and quantification, and related AI technologies, is pleased to announce that the Australian regulatory agency for medicines and medical devices, namely, the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) has approved the software device, Claritas iPET™ for supply in Australia.This clearance from TGA in Australia further expands the reach and use of Claritas iPET™, already cleared and used in several jurisdictions. This software tool which is agnostic to equipment type and manufacturer, and which integrates into existing hospital…

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 06/03/2026
  • 15:57
Dementia Australia

Cronulla comes together for people impacted by dementia

Friday 6 March 2026 Cronulla comes together for people impacted by dementia Cronulla community members tied up their laces and showed up in force last weekend for the 2026 Cronulla Memory Walk & Jog - throwing their support behind people impacted by dementia whilst getting active to improve their brain health. More than 760 people walked, ran and jogged to the finish line to raise an impressive total of $103,430. Dementia Australia CEO Professor Tanya Buchanan extended her gratitude to all who participated, volunteered and raised vital funds for the cause. “There was an incredible turnout from the Cronulla community…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 06/03/2026
  • 12:06
Royal Australian College of GPs

TGA ignored as Victorian Government ‘shortcut’ puts women at risk: RACGP

The Royal Australian College of GPs (RACGP) has expressed disappointment that the Victorian Government has overridden repeated warnings from the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) by allowing pharmacists to prescribe the contraceptive pill, undermining established medicines safety safeguards. The Victorian Government has, contrary to repeated TGA assessments, weakened its medicines safety regulations by enabling pharmacists, rather than medically trained prescribers, to initiate prescriptions for the oral contraceptive pill. RACGP Victoria Chair Dr Anita Muñoz said the announcement prioritises political expediency and industry lobbying over evidence‑based public health. “We are deeply disappointed that the Victorian Government appears to be listening to lobbyists…

  • 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.