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AAP
AAP
Health
Callum Godde

Aged care fears over Vic nurses' free uni

The policy would start a bidding war for a workforce that isn't there, APHA CEO Michael Roff says. (Lukas Coch/AAP PHOTOS) (AAP)

Free university degrees for budding nurses in Victoria could exacerbate nationwide aged care and private hospital workforce shortages and pit states against each other, peak bodies warn.

The Australian Private Hospitals Association (APHA) and Australian Primary Health Care Nurses Association (APHCNA) have poked holes in Victoria's offer to pay off the entire HECS debt of more than 10,000 nursing and midwifery graduates.

All new domestic students enrolling in undergraduate nursing and midwifery courses in 2023 and 2024 will receive up to $16,500 to cover the costs under a $270 million package unveiled on Sunday.

Students will receive $9000 over their three years of study but the rest would only be paid off if they work in Victorian public health services for two years.

While being spruiked by the state government as a salve for the overburdened public hospitals, APHA chief executive Michael Roff said the move could force the closure of private sector services.

"That is not good news for the state's public hospital system," he said in a statement on Monday.

"Victoria's public hospitals are already groaning under the strain of COVID-19, influenza and massive elective surgery backlogs.

"They are currently relying on the private sector to help them manage all of this. If the private sector loses hospitals, the pressure on the public system only increases."

The policy would start a bidding war between states and territories for a workforce that wasn't there, Mr Roff said.

"If each state and territory follows Victoria's lead, we will have not have a national strategy but eight different approaches competing with each other."

The peak body is calling on federal Health Minister Mark Butler to intervene to ensure Australia has a national strategy to address the health workforce shortage.

The APHCNA believes the policy also risks worsening nurse shortages in general practice, as well as aged care, and wants the Andrews government to tweak it.

"The intent of this announcement is to improve the health of Victorians," APHCNA chief executive Ken Griffin said.

"In its current form, it will fail to do this by undermining health settings such as aged care and general practice."

Victorian Health Minister Mary-Anne Thomas was noncommittal on adding incentives to encourage graduates to move into aged care, saying the public health system has borne the brunt of the COVID-19 pandemic.

"Our nursing graduates will make the decisions that are right for them," she told ABC Radio.

She has an ally in the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation, with Victorian branch secretary Lisa Fitzpatrick backing the package to "expand the pipeline of new nurses and midwives".

The Victorian opposition has pledged to match the commitment ahead of the November state election.

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