The University of South Australia is helping to boost SA’s regional health workforce with the first cohort in its Whyalla-based Occupational Therapy and Physiotherapy degrees underway, in the programs’ inaugural year.
A launch event was held last week for the and at UniSA’s Whyalla campus. The two degrees are the first fully-accredited honours degrees of their kind to be offered in regional South Australia and are being delivered alongside UniSA’s health degrees in nursing and midwifery.
Students benefit from UniSA’s five-decades of experience in allied health education and enjoy the same teaching and learning quality and outcomes as their city-based peers. Interest in the new Whyalla offerings is expected to grow year-on-year, inline with awareness of the programs and of the high regional demand for these professions.
UniSA’s Whyalla campus has undergone refurbishments to provide a modern teaching space for the programs, which include the installation of new equipment and technology.
The launch event featured a Welcome to Country by local Barngarla woman Kelly Abdulla. UniSA , and spoke about the importance of supporting regional communities with higher education opportunities and thanked the community for their support.
Prof Jon Buckley said: “South Australia faces significant allied health workforce shortages which are acutely felt in regional areas.
“Providing the Whyalla community with the opportunity to study these degrees at the local level aligns with the South Australian Government’s 2021-2026, and improves access to education for rural, regional and remote students who may not have otherwise chosen to study an allied health degree.”
The four-year physiotherapy and occupational therapy honours degrees join the , as well as its suite of 100% online degrees including psychology, public health and aged care delivered through .
UniSA’s is supporting students’ connections with industry and clinical placements, almost all of which will be completed in-region. Students will also benefit from the multi-disciplinary learning opportunities offered at the on-campus .
“UniSA has a deep and lasting commitment to rural and remote South Australia and we are committed to working with local communities to contribute to the social, intellectual, economic, and cultural development of the regions,” said Prof Buckley.
“We look forward to continuing to work with the State’s regional communities and industry partners to deliver what’s most needed in the regions.”