The number of employed medical practitioners in Australia
increased by almost 20% from 56,207 in 2003 to 67,208 in 2007,
according to a report released today by the Australian Institute of
Health and Welfare (AIHW).
The vast majority of these practitioners (over 90%) mainly
worked in direct patient care, and of these, close to 40% were
primary care practitioners, mostly GPs,' said David Braddock, Head
of the AIHW's Labour Force Unit.
The report, Medical labour force 2007 found that women
continued to gain ground in the workforce with females making up
34% of employed medical practitioners in 2007 compared to 32% in
2003.
The report also found that the medical practitioner workforce is
ageing.
'This is mostly attributable to female practitioners, because
the proportion of women in the medical labour force aged 55-74
years increased while the proportion of women aged less than 45
years decreased,' Mr Braddock explained.
'This suggests that the increasing numbers of young women
joining the medical practitioner workforce over recent decades have
stayed in the workforce, and statistically, have moved into older
age groups,' he said.
The age profile for male practitioners changed very little
during the same period.
The report showed medical practitioners worked a slightly
shorter week in 2007 - an average of 43 hours a week, compared with
slightly more than 44 hours in 2003.
'Although practitioners were working fewer hours per week, the
rising numbers of practitioners resulted in an increase in supply
overall,' he said.
Measured by the full time equivalent of medical practitioners
per 100,000 people, there was an increase from 279 in 2003 to 305
in 2007.
A second report released today Nursing and midwifery labour
force 2007 showed the number of nurses increased by over 11%
between 2003 and 2007, and that nursing continued to be a
female-dominated profession.
Men made up 10% of employed nurses, up from 9% in 2003.
The nursing workforce is also ageing. From 2003 to 2007 the
proportion of nurses aged 50 years and over increased from 28% to
33%.
The average weekly hours worked by nurses, unlike for medical
practitioners, rose over the 2003-2007 period. Nurses worked 33.3
hours in 2007 compared to 32.5 hours in 2003. The proportion of
nurses working part-time (less than 35 hours per week) fell from
50% to 48%.
The number of full time equivalent nurses per 100,000 people
increased from 1,017 in 2003 to 1,095 in 2007, this was an 8%
increase.
Friday 16 October 2009
Further information: Mr Braddock, tel. 02 6244 1136,
mob. 0407 915 851
For media copies of the reports: Publications Officer,
AIHW, tel. (02) 6244 1032.
Medical labour force 2007
Report
summaryFull
report
Nursing and midwifery labour force 2007
Report
summaryFull
report