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The Australian College of Rural and Remote Medicine (ACRRM) has secured $331.7 million from the Albanese Government to deliver its national training program from now to December 2030. 

The funding, announced by Minister for Health and Ageing Mark Butler MP, provides five years of certainty for the training of Rural Generalist doctors serving rural, remote and First Nations communities across Australia. 

ACRRM President Dr Rod Martin says the commitment recognises the College’s central role in training doctors with the skills required to practise safely and confidently in settings where they are most needed. 

“This funding allows ACRRM to continue delivering high-quality training that reflects the realities of rural and remote practice,” Dr Martin says. 

“ACRRM has seen sustained high levels of applications for Rural Generalist training in recent years, with a 30 per cent increase in applications year on year for the past three years.  

“This clearly reflects the strong demand among doctors for broad clinical skills, advanced specialist skills, and the adaptability across diverse community settings,” he says. 

Dr Martin says the agreement will support registrars in training and help strengthen the medical workforce pipeline for communities that face the greatest access challenges. 

“As the only College dedicated exclusively to training Rural Generalist doctors, ACRRM plays a critical role in preparing doctors with the skills and confidence needed to work in rural, remote and First Nations communities,” he says. 

This investment underpins ACRRM’s delivery of Fellowship training across Australia and enables continued work with government to train the next generation of Rural Generalist doctors, while also strengthening retention of the existing rural medical workforce. 

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The Australian College of Rural and Remote Medicine (ACRRM) has secured $331.7 million from the Albanese Government to deliver its national training program from now to December 2030. 

The funding, announced by Minister for Health and Ageing Mark Butler MP, provides five years of certainty for the training of Rural Generalist doctors serving rural, remote and First Nations communities across Australia. 

ACRRM President Dr Rod Martin says the commitment recognises the College’s central role in training doctors with the skills required to practise safely and confidently in settings where they are most needed. 

“This funding allows ACRRM to continue delivering high-quality training that reflects the realities of rural and remote practice,” Dr Martin says. 

“ACRRM has seen sustained high levels of applications for Rural Generalist training in recent years, with a 30 per cent increase in applications year on year for the past three years.  

“This clearly reflects the strong demand among doctors for broad clinical skills, advanced specialist skills, and the adaptability across diverse community settings,” he says. 

Dr Martin says the agreement will support registrars in training and help strengthen the medical workforce pipeline for communities that face the greatest access challenges. 

“As the only College dedicated exclusively to training Rural Generalist doctors, ACRRM plays a critical role in preparing doctors with the skills and confidence needed to work in rural, remote and First Nations communities,” he says. 

This investment underpins ACRRM’s delivery of Fellowship training across Australia and enables continued work with government to train the next generation of Rural Generalist doctors, while also strengthening retention of the existing rural medical workforce.