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A Glimpse at the Australian Health Information Workforce: Findings from the First Australian Census

conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-03, 14:39 authored by Kerryn Butler-HendersonKerryn Butler-Henderson, Kathleen Gray
The Australian Health Information Workforce is a critical discipline in the health sector as the investment in digital technologies increases. Yet historically there was no standardized reporting about the workforce and its six professional areas: clinical coding, costing analysts, data analysts, health informaticians, health information managers and health librarians. This paper presents the findings from the inaugural Australian Health Information Workforce Census. Analysis of 1,596 responses indicates this is an aging (56.1% ≥45 years) workforce with a large (78.1%) female population. Working in permanent (82%), public hospital (72%) roles, in professional or managerial roles (84%). The majority (93.2%) of respondents hold a tertiary qualification in health information, one-quarter of these at masters or doctoral level. Fewer than 30% of respondents hold a health information credential from a professional or industry association. The data from the ongoing national census will inform workforce planning and enable forecasting of the future workforce needs.

History

Start page

1145

End page

1149

Total pages

5

Outlet

MEDINFO 2019: Health and Wellbeing E-Networks for All: Proceedings of the 17th World Congress on Medical and Health Informatics

Editors

Lucila Ohno-Machado & Brigitte Seroussi

Name of conference

MEDINFO 2019: Health and Wellbeing e-Networks for All 17th World Congress on Medical and Health Informatics

Publisher

IOS Press

Place published

Netherlands

Start date

2019-08-25

End date

2019-08-30

Language

English

Copyright

© 2019 International Medical Informatics Association (IMIA) and IOS Press. This article is published online with Open Access by IOS Press and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License 4.0 (CC BY-NC 4.0)

Former Identifier

2006109256

Esploro creation date

2021-10-29

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