Funding review the medicine for ailing salaries
The announcement that funding arrangements for Medicine and
Dentistry degree programmes will be reviewed has been
welcomed by the Association of University Staff National
President, Professor Nigel Haworth. He said that Medical and
Dental academic staff have for too long subsidised Medical
and Dental teaching at the Universities of Otago and
Auckland through low salaries and poor conditions of
employment, and any move to alleviate this would find strong
support.
The Minister for Tertiary Education, Dr Michael
Cullen, said that the review, to be carried out this year,
will ensure that there is sufficient funding available to
maximise training opportunities in order that the country
continues to produce the highest-quality
graduates.
Professor Haworth said that government funding
rates for Medicine and Dentistry remain less in actual terms
than they were in 1992, and that current funding levels are
now perilously close to compromising the quality of the
programmes. “It is our view that the overall funding
shortfall in Medicine is around $81,699 over the cost of a
degree, or $NZ13,616 per student per annum, and in Dentistry
by $64,920 over the cost of a degree, or $12,584 per student
per annum,” he said. “That funding shortfall had been borne
by students through high fees and by staff through low
salaries.”
Professor Haworth said that a significant
problem is the disparity between salaries paid to Medical
and Dental specialists within the public health system and
those in the universities. “Despite an international
acceptance that salary rates should be comparable, the
current difference in base-salaries is around $20,000 per
year,” he said. “Under current salary structures, that
differential will balloon to $49,000 within eight years
unless action is taken. That is completely untenable.”
Specialists employed in New Zealand’s only Dental School
at the University of Otago are paid around half the amount
received by their colleagues in private
practice.
Professor Haworth said that a major problem
faced by the universities is their ability to recruit or to
retain specialist staff in an increasing number of clinical
specialties.
The review will be carried out by officials
from the Tertiary Education Commission and Ministry of
Education who are expected to report back to the Minister
later this year to ensure any changes can be in place for
the next academic year.
Ends
For further information or
comment please contact:
Professor Nigel
Haworth
AUS National President
Phone (09)
373 7599, extension 85235 (work)
(09) 376
6359 (home)
Mobile 021 637 599
Email
n.haworth@auckland.ac.nz
For background information
please contact:
Marty Braithwaite
AUS
Industrial/Communications Officer
Mobile 021 770
843
The Association of University Staff of New
Zealand
PO Box 11 767, Wellington, New Zealand
Phone
+64 4 915 6690 Fax +64 4 915 6699 Email:
national.office@aus.ac.nz