Skip to content
Government Federal, Indigenous

AMSANT welcomes new Closing the Gap investment as progress remains critical

Aboriginal Medical Services Alliance Northern Territory (AMSANT) 2 mins read

The Aboriginal Medical Services Alliance Northern Territory (AMSANT) today noted the Prime Minister’s annual statement on the National Agreement on Closing the Gap. It welcomes the Federal Government’s latest investments to build progress, particularly investment in health infrastructure and measures to reduce the cost of food in remote stores.

AMSANT Chair Rob McPhee said these initiatives signal growing recognition of the deep and complex challenges facing Aboriginal communities in the Northern Territory.

‘We welcome the commitment to improve access to Aboriginal employment in the health sector, reduce the cost of groceries in remote communities, and strengthen support for services that underpin healthy, strong families,’ Mr McPhee said.

‘We know that affordable food, meaningful work and community connection are critical contributors to long-term health and wellbeing, alongside clinical care.’

However, the latest Closing the Gap reporting confirms that only four of the 19 targets are currently on track, with key indicators—including early childhood development, incarceration, out-of-home care and suicide—moving in the wrong direction.

Mr McPhee said this underscores the need for sustained, coordinated action across all social determinants of health and wellbeing.

‘The additional $144.1 million for Aboriginal community controlled health service infrastructure is particularly important. Modern clinics and safe staff accommodation are essential to delivering quality care in remote communities,’ he said.

‘But clinical investment alone will not close the gap. The social determinants of health—education, housing, economic opportunity, food security and community safety—continue to place significant pressure on our communities. Ongoing attention to these are just as important so people do not have to come to a clinic or hospital in the first place.’

‘These results particularly show that too many vulnerable children are not getting the support they need early in life.’

At the start of the school year, AMSANT highlighted the vital connection between education and lifelong health. Each additional year of education reduces adult mortality risk by nearly 2%, while completing secondary school reduces mortality risk by almost 25%. Targets around completing secondary school are currently not on track to be met.

‘Education is one of the strongest predictors of lifelong health,’ Mr McPhee said. ‘If we want to close the gap in life expectancy and wellbeing, we must also close the gaps in opportunity that begin in early childhood.’

AMSANT also welcomed the $13.9 million investment in 13YARN to address worsening suicide rates, extending its hours and establishing a text message service so more First Nations people can access culturally safe crisis counselling.

‘At a time when suicide rates remain deeply concerning, strengthening culturally safe crisis support is critical,” Mr McPhee said.

AMSANT looks forward to working with the Australian Government, Northern Territory Government, community controlled organisations and peak bodies to ensure the new funding supports equitable, culturally safe and First Nations-led service delivery that improves the health and wellbeing of Aboriginal families and communities.

ENDS


Contact details:

 Amy Price, 0437 027 156  

More from this category

  • General News, Government Federal
  • 13/02/2026
  • 08:00
e61 Institute

Aussies couple up with people of similar socio-economic status: New research

Australians are coupling up with people of similar socio-economic status, perpetuating inequality and fuelling house price growth in cities, according to new research by the e61 Institute. The analysis of 2021 Census data finds that in 38% of working age couples, both partners have a university degree, far higher than would occur under random matching. Bachelor’s degree holders, for example, are about 85% more likely to partner with another bachelor’s graduate than chance would predict. Coupling up based on social-economic background is known as assortative mating. “Because higher education is strongly linked to lifetime earnings, this means higher incomes are…

  • General News, Indigenous
  • 13/02/2026
  • 07:10
UNSW Sydney

18 years on from the National Apology to the Stolen Generations, the systematic removal of Aboriginal children is worse than ever

UNSW researcher A/Prof. BJ Newton says that despite the National Apology to the Stolen Generations, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children are being removed from their families at unprecedented and escalating rates, despite national commitments to ensure such injustices never happened again. Many Australians remember exactly where they were when, on 13 February 2008, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd stood in parliament and apologised to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, particularly Stolen Generations survivors and their families, for the systematic and forced removal of thousands of Aboriginal children from their families. The National Apology speech gave Aboriginal and Torres…

  • Animal Animal WelfareRights, Indigenous
  • 12/02/2026
  • 22:08
Coalition Against Duck Shooting

Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan ignores drought, fires, low bird numbers and Indigenous culture by calling a 2026 recreational duck shooting season.

Premier Jacinta Allan is commended for initiating the First Nations Treaty, but calling a 2026 recreationalduck shooting season shows a profound disregard for Victoria’s First Nations peoples and their waterbirdsby allowing a small number of thrill-seeking duck shooters (only 0.2% of the Victorian population) to blasttheir birds out of the sky for fun. Victoria is in debt to the tune of around $188 billion yet this Premier prefers to waste $11 million of ourtaxes on propping up a dying duck shooting activity rather than investing in a First Nations cultural, nature-based wetlands tourism industry. In NSW (where duck shooting is…

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.