Universities Australia welcomes more places for First Nations medical students

Giovanni Torre
Giovanni Torre Published October 10, 2025 at 4.00pm (AWST)

Universities Australia has welcomed the federal government's decision to remove caps on Commonwealth Supported Places for First Nations medical students through the Education Legislation Amendment (Integrity and Other Measures) Bill 2025.

"If passed by the Parliament, it will be a really important reform that will change the lives of First Nations students, their families and communities, as well as our health system," Universities Australia, Chief Executive Officer, Mr Luke Sheehy said this week.

The number of First Nations students studying medicine continues to grow, with 489 enrolled in 2024; a 17 per cent increase since 2021, including 124 new students.

"The growth in First Nations medical student numbers shows what's possible when governments and universities work together to expand opportunity and support success," Mr Sheehy said.

"This decision means every First Nations student who earns a place to study medicine will have the opportunity to do so with support.

"This is an important reform that will build a stronger health workforce – one that better reflects the communities it cares for."

Universities Australia said it congratulates the government on the "important step" and that it will continue working to support students from study to practice.

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