• 16 May, 2025

Gender Undervaluation – Priority Awards Review

Submission by the Australian Physiotherapy Association

May 2025

Physiotherapist stretching a patient's back

Election 2025: APA congratulates Prime Minister Albanese, urges reforms to healthcare system

The Australian Physiotherapy Association (APA) congratulates Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Labor’s re-election and looks forward to continuing our working relationship to deliver fairer, timely and more effective healthcare for Australians.  

APA National President Dr Rik Dawson MACP urges the second term Albanese Government to prioritise providing big solutions to the big problems currently ailing the Australian healthcare system.  

Older person being taken through their rehabilitation exercises on a bike by their physiotherapist

APA launches national prevention statement, calls on next government to act

The Australian Physiotherapy Association (APA) is calling on the next federal government to prioritise urgent action on falls prevention, launching a new evidence-based position statement as April Falls Prevention Month draws to a close.

  • 16 May, 2025

APA Position Statement on Falls Prevention

Statement by Australian Physiotherapy Association

April 2025

older woman patient is assisted in upper body exercises by younger female physiotherapist in practice

Falls destroy lives—and cost the system $5 billion— APA has solutions

Every three minutes, an older Australian is hospitalised because of a fall.i Falls are the leading cause of injury-related hospital admissions and aged care admissions, costing the healthcare system more than $5 billion annually.ii 

As Australia’s population ages, the burden is only set to grow.  

The Australian Physiotherapy Association (APA) is calling on the next federal government to act on falls prevention— with evidence-based, cost-effective solutions that the Australian public overwhelming want.

The Federal Election has been called for 3 May 2025

Election 2025: Physiotherapy missing link for faster, fairer care

The Federal Election has been called for 3 May 2025, and while everyone whips into campaign mode, millions of Australians are suffering needless pain, racking up preventable hospital visits because they cannot access timely physiotherapy. The Australian Physiotherapy Association (APA) is calling for urgent reform ahead of the election, putting direct access to physiotherapy, new care pathways, and greater investment in prevention at the forefront of the healthcare conversation.

Blue tile says in the news federal budget 24-25

Federal Budget: Greater reform required to put patients at the centre of care

The Australian Physiotherapy Association (APA) welcomes the continued investment in the nation’s health articulated in tonight’s Federal Budget.

In a budget framed as a plan for a “new generation of prosperity”, APA National President Dr Rik Dawson MACP said Australia’s healthcare system requires a bolder reform agenda.

  • 16 May, 2025

Draft National Allied Health Workforce Strategy

Submission by the Australian Physiotherapy Association

March 2025

a physiotherapist assists an elderly patient with an arm exercise in a studio

Patients need faster, fairer care: APA calls for direct access to physiotherapy

Faster, fairer and more effective care must be on the election ballot this campaign season. The Australian Physiotherapy Association (APA) is urging political parties to prioritise healthcare reform that will deliver for the millions of Australians with musculoskeletal conditions and chronic pain. At the heart of the APA’s call is a critical reform: publicly funded First Contact Physiotherapy (FCP), which would provide direct access to physiotherapists for diagnosis and treatment when they need it and without needing a GP referral.

Yellow background with coins, books and a graduation hat stacked on top of each other

Research project to strengthen the case for First Contact Physiotherapy in primary care

The National Health and Medical Research Council has awarded the University of Sydney and their major support partner, the Australian Physiotherapy Association (APA), a Partnership Grant for the PhysioDirect-Aus project. This research will explore the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness, and implementation of a publicly funded direct access physiotherapy pathway for musculoskeletal pain in Australia.

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