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16 March, 2025

Call for more maternity care

THE Australian College of Rural and Remote Medicine (ACRRM) is calling on all political parties to outline their policies to address the worsening crisis in rural maternity care, as closures and service downgrades put women, babies, and families at risk.


Call for more maternity care - feature photo

The latest data from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare shows that nearly 80,000 women give birth outside Australia’s cities each year.

ACRRM President, Dr Rod Martin, says that with so many women and babies reliant on high-quality healthcare close to home, it is critical maternity care is prioritised in political discussions.

“We welcome both major parties’ support for women’s health in their election promises, but we are yet to see a clear commitment to improving rural maternity services,” Dr Martin says. “We should not have the death of a mother or a baby to signal the need for true change backed by genuine investment.”

ACRRM has outlined practical solutions to improve maternity services in its 2025-2026 Pre-Budget Submission, calling for:

  • A commitment to stopping rural maternity service closures,

  • Targeted funding to attract and retain the rural maternity workforce, including Rural Generalists (RGs) skilled in obstetrics and anaesthetics,

  • An intergovernmental taskforce to secure funding and ensure the continuity of rural maternity and women’s health services at risk of closure.

Dr Martin says that properly funded, rural-focused models that integrate RGs with advanced obstetric and anaesthetic training, working alongside midwives and other health professionals, can provide high-quality care locally, reducing the financial and emotional burden on rural families.

“This model puts the health of women, babies, and families in rural and remote communities at the forefront.”

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