Govt confirms mental health workforce expansion

Health Minister Andrew Little.

The Government is increasing the number of funded clinical psychology internships and the payment interns receive on placement to support more students to choose clinical psychology as a career and address mental health workforce demand.

By 2024, NZ will have increased the number of interns to 40 every year, along with funding for the internship to nearly $60,000 a year.

'Since coming to Government in 2017, we've more than trebled the number of funded clinical psychology internships available across the health sector,” says Health Minister Andrew Little.

'After years of no growth, we lifted the number of internships from 12 in 2017 to 28 this year. 'This will now increase in 2023 to 38 and to 40 for each year after that.

'We've already increased the payment interns receive by 40 per cent to nearly $60,000 each.

'This is part of the Government's wider work to support and upskill our existing mental health workforce, as well as grow the pipeline of people coming to work in mental health and addiction roles.

'This is a significant contribution and one we know will encourage more people to consider studying towards a career in clinical psychology.”

Enhancements to the psychology intern programme, including the trial hubs where interns now have the opportunity to work across multiple services with multiple clinical supervisors, including regional, ICAMHS and adult mental health services, are just one part of a wider workforce development programme.

'The Government is also funding free access to a range of talking therapy training programmes for people working in Mental Health and addiction. These include courses in cognitive behavioural therapy for children and young people, youth addiction, and Kaupapa Māori models of talking therapy.

'Work is also under way to deliver more support and training for those providing mental health and wellbeing supports to refugees, migrants and Asian communities.

'Primary mental health and addiction services are an area experiencing increasing demand. On the back of the $1.9billion Wellbeing Budget investment, the Access and Choice programme is helping tens of thousands of New Zealanders every month and has recently celebrated reaching 1000FTE roles under contract.

'That means the delivery of important services that simply didn't exist before the 2019 Wellbeing Budget, bringing services closer to home that are available when and where people need them.”

The Government has already announced the first ever accreditation pathway for counsellors to work in publicly funded roles, and Budget 22's investment of $76 million over four years to develop the health workforce that includes a focus on primary care.

3 comments

Five years

Posted on 19-08-2022 08:06 | By Kancho

This government has been in power. These problems have been getting worse for all this time. Now old people are being pushed out if care because rest homes close through lack of staff. The borders have been closed for far to long and no priority until very recently and far too late. Same story this is all to little to late. Every crisis is never a crisis to this government and there have been so many.


Bollocks

Posted on 19-08-2022 09:10 | By First Responder

I don't believe anything Angry Andy says. End of story


Hahaha

Posted on 19-08-2022 18:14 | By Slim Shady

Where from? Is he going to magic them up out of thin air? Labour have a dream that they are going to train hundreds of thousands of Kiwis into jobs. But it’s impossible. Why? Because not enough of them go to school. They cannot count or write. In short, they’re “a bit thick” to coin Grant Robertson.


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