Last week, Healthy North Coast and the Australian Primary Health Care Nurses Association (APNA) visited The Lismore Clinic to launch two programs aimed at building the capability of primary care nurses on the North Coast:
1. Transition to Practice Program (TPP)
Following an Expression of Interest process, eight nurses across the North Coast will participate in the 2024 TPP, which supports nurses who have transitioned into primary health care and provides additional assistance, including mentoring, exclusive education tools/resources, and networking opportunities.
2. Building Nurse Capacity (BNC) program
13 practices across the North Coast will participate in the BNC program, which supports nurses in developing nurse-delivered, team-based models of care – also known as nurse clinics. These will focus on key priority health areas such as cardiovascular health, diabetes, cancer control, mental health and injury prevention and control.
The total combined investment is $331,000 and will support, develop and upskill nurses in our region to deliver quality health care to their communities.
Karen Booth, president of APNA, was in Lismore for the launch and commented:
“We know that building capacity in the primary health care nursing workforce has great flow-on effects. Strengthening skills and supporting nurses, especially in nurse-led care, helps to not only support the GP teams that they work with, but also shares the workload and increases access to care for our communities.”
Read the full media release.