North West Hospital and Health Service search for junior doctors to join staff

A young doctor who switched her seaside upbringing to living and working in her dream job in northwest Queensland is urging other medical graduates to reconsider their career options and head into rural medicine.

Gabrielle Keating never thought her six-week placement in Mt Isa would lead her to finding her passion in rural and remote medicine, but after Covid-impacted placement options and her finding love with a cowboy, the young doctor is now a dedicated member of the North West Hospital and Health Service staff.

news, australia, lifestyle, fitness, health & wellbeing, qld news, tas news, north west hospital and health service search for junior doctors to join staff

Dr Gabrielle Keating is loving her life working for the North West Hospital and Health Service. Credit: News Corp Australia, Supplied

Dr Keating told NewsWire she would encourage any young medical graduate to take advantage of the extra perks from working in remote communities.

Get in front of tomorrow's news for FREE

Journalism for the curious Australian across politics, business, culture and opinion.

READ NOW

“I just loved it, it was so much fun and I got so much clinical exposure,” she said.

“I loved it so much here I never left and did most of my placement out here.

“With Covid, there was a lot of angst about having students in the bigger hospitals but I was able to stay out here.”

She enjoyed the experience so much that she decided to stay after her placements ended and take up a governess job at Julia Creek – where she was set up with her “cowboy” boyfriend by the mayor and the small community.

news, australia, lifestyle, fitness, health & wellbeing, qld news, tas news, north west hospital and health service search for junior doctors to join staff

Dr Keating is really diving into the opportunity her life in northwest Queensland brings. Supplied Credit: News Corp Australia

news, australia, lifestyle, fitness, health & wellbeing, qld news, tas news, north west hospital and health service search for junior doctors to join staff

With her ‘cowboy’ boyfriend. Supplied Credit: News Corp Australia

Having grown up in the coastal town of Yeppoon, Dr Keating said embracing her new lifestyle had come with its challenges – like the pub being the only option for a nice meal or the costs of flights – but she had found that she’d come to love living in northwest Queensland.

“It has its own beauties in the red dirt and the people,” she said.

“The medicine makes up for a lot of it because there’s a lot more responsibility and autonomy from early on.”

Dr Keating said nearly the minute she arrived on placement in Mt Isa, she was given a lot more opportunity to expand her learning and expertise than what she would have done if she’d stayed in a larger hospital rotation.

news, australia, lifestyle, fitness, health & wellbeing, qld news, tas news, north west hospital and health service search for junior doctors to join staff

Dr Keating (right) says she’s made so many different friends through her work at the North West Hospital and Health Service. Supplied Credit: News Corp Australia

“You don’t have all these specialities, you have to treat the whole patient,” she said.

“I’ve accelerated in my career more.

“You are stepping up into roles that you wouldn’t do so in a bigger centre.

“I’ve been to lots of outreach sites in the Gulf, flying to remote islands and being part of that has been an experience.”

Dr Keating said working in a community like Mt Isa had allowed her to build better relationships with her patients that in turn had made her a better doctor.

“I think I understand the barriers you can have both personally and medically,” she said.

“There’s a bit more of that empathy and understanding that I can have for my patients and therefore I can advocate for them.

“You’re not just treating a number or a name, you’re treating the whole patient and you’ve often got that connection with them.

“It’s very satisfying and it gives you purpose in your role.

“You can see a difference you’re making in the area.”

North West Hospital and Health Service is recruiting for a wide range of roles in the region, with many positions offering doctors almost double the salary of their city counterparts.

Dr Keating said the extra financial support was definitely a bonus during tough economic times.

“In terms of GPs, we’re so short,” she said.

“There’s six GPs in the Mt Isa area.

“But it can it can be lucrative and you can really set some good solid foundations from early in your career.”

news, australia, lifestyle, fitness, health & wellbeing, qld news, tas news, north west hospital and health service search for junior doctors to join staff

Dr Keating enjoys her shift with her North West Hospital and Health Service staff. Supplied Credit: Supplied

She added that doctors could also apply for government grants, including a $70,000 bonus for moving from the Brisbane metro area to a rural or remote community.

“I think the biggest thing is the North West can be super flexible,” Dr Keating said.

“We want people to come here and invest in the community.

“You can make your job however you want it to look, the North West can make that flexible.

“There’s a hesitancy in urban areas they’re not ready or they’re not experienced enough or too junior for these areas but I think you actually end up being more supported.

“You can come out here very junior and move your way up through the ranks and responsibilities much quicker.

news, australia, lifestyle, fitness, health & wellbeing, qld news, tas news, north west hospital and health service search for junior doctors to join staff

Dr Keating says her job has allowed her to see so many different places than what she’d experience in a bigger city. Credit: News Corp Australia

“It’s really fun place to live and you can really have a very good lifestyle out here.”

The push for regional doctors comes as the latest data found more than 22,797 trained health professionals, including 4699 overseas doctors, have relocated to Australia in the first 10 months of this financial year.

The data showed 60 per cent of doctors who relocated to Australia between July 2023 to April 2024 were from either the UK, Ireland, India and the Philippines.

The majority of doctors have also settled in a regional, rural or remote community, with guidelines stipulating foreign doctors must practise outside major cities for the first 10 years after immigrating to Australia if they want to provide Medicare services.

OTHER NEWS

18 minutes ago

Trump moves to throw out hush money convictions hours after immunity ruling

18 minutes ago

Bus company ‘refused’ to move asylum seekers to Bibby Stockholm during protest

18 minutes ago

Vape ban laws have come into effect from July 1

18 minutes ago

'Unbelievable' match point ends Wimbledon marathon

18 minutes ago

Is It Better To Miss The Green In The Bunker Or Rough? The Data Is Clear Cut...

18 minutes ago

Physicists Have Created The World's Most Fiendishly Difficult Maze

21 minutes ago

Artificial nests built to help save rare eastern osprey birds on Eyre Peninsula

21 minutes ago

USA vs. Uruguay lineups: Yunus Musah starts for suspended Tim Weah, Matt Turner returns

24 minutes ago

'Inside Out 2' is the Fastest Animated Movie To Hit $1 Billion at the Box Office | THR News Video

24 minutes ago

Italy is Selling Houses for 1 Euro — Is It A Good Idea to Buy One?

24 minutes ago

Jeremy Pena's homer lifts surging Astros to 3-1 win over Blue Jays

24 minutes ago

Analysts have a bleak outlook for car dealers after CDK cyberattack

24 minutes ago

Private schools tax raid justified because they have ‘priced out’ middle class, suggests Phillipson

24 minutes ago

'Everyone is anxious': Holidaymaker tells of 'apocalyptic' scenes on Greek island as PM warns of more wildfires

24 minutes ago

US Marshals partner with Coinbase to manage large cap crypto assets

24 minutes ago

Where is Hurricane Beryl headed next? Should the US prepare?

24 minutes ago

NADINE DORRIES: From my nursing days in the 1970s to the Pony Club mums gulled by Blair, how we always learn the hard way that you can't trust Labour

24 minutes ago

Uruguay star Maximiliano Araujo is stretchered off with his neck in a BRACE after scary clash of heads left teammates begging for medical help

28 minutes ago

Asia-Pacific markets mostly fall as Nasdaq reaches new highs; South Korea inflation in focus

30 minutes ago

No team are favourites against Brazil, says Colombia coach Lorenzo

30 minutes ago

Jayson Tatum Makes NBA History After Boston Celtics' Contract Decision

30 minutes ago

Chinese brands to reach a third of global new car sales by 2030 – report

30 minutes ago

Sarah Ferguson Pens Tribute to 'My Dear Friend' Princess Diana on What Would Have Been Her 63rd Birthday

30 minutes ago

Italy is in 'permanent state of climate calamity' - WWF

30 minutes ago

Social Security Administration strips benefits from woman with Down Syndrome

30 minutes ago

Gretchen Whitmer warns Joe Biden he can’t win Michigan after debate flop – but insists she won’t replace him

30 minutes ago

Editorial: Emmanuel Macron’s French election gamble leaves rest of Europe holding its breath

30 minutes ago

Dundalk native Andy Mackin looking forward to bringing iconic hotel back to life

30 minutes ago

Taylor Swift’s stage designer explores possible sale

30 minutes ago

Scientists wary of bird flu pandemic ‘unfolding in slow motion’

30 minutes ago

Cancelled Xbox streaming box revealed in patent looks weirdly like a Dreamcast

30 minutes ago

Panthers sign pair of players to shore up team's depth

30 minutes ago

Housing demand may be significantly below Simon Harris’s 50,000-a-year target, ESRI report says

30 minutes ago

Vikki Wall returns to boost Meath after missing out on Olympic dream with Ireland rugby sevens

30 minutes ago

Conservatives label Keir Starmer a 'part-time Prime Minister'

30 minutes ago

GEOFFREY LEAN: Labour building on Green Belt could worsen house crisis

30 minutes ago

Eir owner lines up $4.1bn deal for Latin American mobile business

30 minutes ago

UK election latest: ‘Don’t wake up to five more years of the Tories,’ Labour warns voters

30 minutes ago

Palace sign Japan's Daichi Kamada

30 minutes ago

Peter Fitzsimon's jumps to defence of Australia's new governor general