Aust J Rural Health. 2026 Aug;34(4):e70234. doi: 10.1111/ajr.70234.
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: To provide the first national analysis of the distribution and professional composition of PhD-qualified health professionals across metropolitan, regional, rural and remote Australia.
DESIGN: Cross-sectional analysis of 2021 Australian Census data.
SETTING: Australia, classified by Modified Monash Model (MM) remoteness categories.
PARTICIPANTS: Health professionals reporting a doctoral-level qualification (PhD).
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Counts and proportions of PhD-qualified health professionals by MM category and occupation group; association between remoteness and PhD representation.
METHODS: Occupations were grouped into medicine, allied health, and nursing. Residential locations were mapped to MM categories. Descriptive statistics and linear regression examined distribution patterns.
RESULTS: Of 21 510 PhD-qualified health professionals, 85% lived in metropolitan areas (MM1), with 3027 (14%) in regional, rural and remote communities and only 12 (< 1%) in very remote areas (MM7). Medical practitioners comprised 61%, allied health 36% (predominantly psychology) and nursing 3%. Increasing remoteness was associated with reduced PhD representation (β = -0.0041, p = 0.011).
CONCLUSIONS: Research capacity is concentrated in metropolitan areas, yet a substantial base of PhD-qualified professionals exists in RRR communities. Targeted investment in funding, infrastructure and support could leverage this workforce to build sustainable rural health research capacity.
PMID:42470212 | DOI:10.1111/ajr.70234