By Mark Bahnisch on July 19, 2011
We’re often told that there are massive shortages of health professionals. But since the increase in medical places, we have more graduate doctors than health departments know what to do with. The actual problems go to how and where health professionals work.
Posted in Featured, Health, Policy, Sociology | Tagged allied health workers, doctors, Gillard government, health policy, health reform, health workforce, judith sloan, Kevin Rudd, medicare locals, models of care, national health and hospital reform, nurses, roundtable, super clinics |
By Mark Bahnisch on January 13, 2010
One of the debates we should no doubt be having about the spate of violent and racist attacks on Indian students in this country is around the conditions of service work in the less salubrious bits of the service industries [...]
Posted in Australiana, Economics, Education, Industrial Relations, International, Politics, Sociology | Tagged Capitalism, globalisation, health and saftey, Immigration, Indian students, Industrial Relations, international students, night time economy, nurses, racism, service industry, Sociology, structural racism, visa, workers, workplace health and safety, workplace safety, zero harm |
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