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19 June 2025

JCU Medicine: Transforming Rural Health Through Place, Purpose, and Passion

JCU Medicine: Transforming Rural Health Through Place, Purpose, and Passion
As the new millennium drew near, a powerful medical vision was stirring in North Queensland.

As the new millennium drew near, a powerful medical vision was stirring in North Queensland. It was a bold plan - to reimagine medical education in a way that would confront the persistent health inequities facing rural, regional, and remote Australians, and to train doctors who would serve those communities. 

The goal was to establish a medical school in the tropics that would train doctors not just to practice medicine, but to serve regional and remote communities at home, where they were needed most. That vision became James Cook University’s College of Medicine, and 25 years on, it’s success cannot be denied. 

For JCU Medicine’s founding Dean Professor Richard Hays, the challenge was immense but meaningful. 

“We knew we had to build something that truly prepared students for regional and rural medicine,” he recalls. “We wanted a program that wasn’t just about producing graduates but about creating a workforce that would stay and serve in North Queensland.” 

“We built the most evidence-based medical program in Australia,” Prof Hays says.  

Despite its bold approach, the fledgling program faced early criticism. Some doubted whether a medical school based so far from Australia’s traditional centres of medical education could compete. 

Fast forward to the present and the program’s outcomes speak for themselves. JCU Medicine has trained over 2,693 doctors, many of whom have gone on to become respected clinicians, researchers, and leaders — not only across northern Australia but around the globe. 

Professor Sarah Larkins, current Dean of the College of Medicine and Dentistry, sees the program’s achievements as deeply connected to its founding mission — and its evolution. 

“Over the past 25 years we have seen our graduates transform the medical workforce across rural, regional and remote northern Australia,” she says. “The workforce has grown and is sustainable, with JCU graduates providing supervision across the region as well as introducing new homegrown services in specialty areas that have never been available in northern Queensland before,” she says. 

Professor Larkins acknowledges that with continued growth comes new responsibility. “The popularity of our program for applicants continues to grow, so we need to manage growth while ensuring we maintain the quality of the program and stay true to our values,” she says. “Ongoing work with our health sector partners and communities is vital to continuing to achieve these great outcomes. 

“We also need to continue to adapt and update our curriculum to ensure that our graduates are equipped with the skills to optimally serve in a digitally enabled health system.” 

As the JCU Medicine community gathered to celebrate 25 years in May, Professor Larkins thanked all who helped make it possible: “It takes a village to build and sustain a medical program... Congratulations and thanks to all of you. Bring on the next 25 years!” 

Find out more about JCU’s College of Medicine and Dentistry: www.jcu.edu.au/cmd 

NQRTH is an initiative of the Australian Government's Integrated Rural Training Pipeline (IRTP) and is facilitated by James Cook University in partnership with public and private hospitals, Queensland Aboriginal and Islander Health Council (QAIHC), health services, Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHOs) and GP clinics.

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