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New campaign launched to raise awareness of the key role played by MS Nurses



MS Australia has today launched a new campaign at Parliament House on World MS Day (30 May) to raise awareness of the crucial role played by MS Nurses.

MS Nurses: Life-Changing Care

Video Credit: MS Australia

The MS Nurses: Life-Changing Care campaign features intimate interviews with MS Nurses and their patients, which showcase the incredible value of MS Nurse care; contributing to a range of health benefits for people with MS, such as lower disability levels, slower disease progression, less severe symptoms, improved mental health, and higher quality of life.

MS Australia says a modest investment of $6.5m a year would provide an extra 65 MS Nurses to support people living with MS.

The number of people diagnosed with MS has risen rapidly in recent years, with over 33,000 Australians now living with the disease.

At the same time, the number of MS Nurses practising in Australia is in decline (around 90), with approximately only one nurse for every 370 individuals living with MS, highlighting a significant gap in access to specialised care. 

Almost one in three Australians living with MS are being deprived of the necessary care and support to manage their condition effectively, impacting their overall wellbeing and quality of life. Access to an MS Nurse is even more challenging in regional Australia.

Addressing a Parliamentary Friends of MS event, the Hon Ged Kearney MP, Assistant Minister for Health and Aged Care, acknowledged the immense value delivered by the MS Nurse workforce and pledged her Government’s support and engagement in identifying funding pathways to address the workforce shortage.

We are absolutely focusing on [nursing workforce] – it’s what our government is incredibly, absolutely, one hundred per cent committed to. In fact, we have five ministers in the health portfolio; five, and pretty much the number one thing we talk about is workforce, workforce, workforce.

We couldn’t think of any partners better than MS Australia to work with as we pursue that agenda,”

Hon Ged Kearney MP, Assistant Minister for Health and Aged Care.

I’m very pleased that the government is looking at means and methods to improve multidisciplinary care teams, hub and spoke models, increasing nurses, [and] training in the regions – all of those things make a difference.”

Dr Anne Webster, MP, Shadow Assistant Minister for Regional Health.

Keynote speaker, President of MS Nurses Australasia (MSNA), Meaghan Osborne explained why MS Nurses are so critical. 

MS Nurses make a huge difference to people living with multiple sclerosis. Yet 31.5% of people with MS don’t have access to MS Nurse care.

Every single person living with MS should have equal opportunity to access an MS Nurse across this country, and the dignity and quality of life that such access can ensure.”

Ms Meaghan Osborne

In addition to providing essential care and support to people with MS, MS Nurses are also a ‘cost-dominant’ (ie cost saving) healthcare solution.

The recent MS Nurse Care in Australia report produced by MS Australia in collaboration with the Menzies Institute for Medical Research and MSNA, found that investing $6.5m to employ an additional 65 MS Nurses would result in savings in excess of $60m every year.

By providing timely and proactive care, MS Nurses can help prevent hospitalisations and emergency department presentations, which are costly to both the patient and the healthcare system.

Additionally, MS Nurses work together with other healthcare providers, such as neurologists and general practitioners, to ensure that patients receive coordinated and comprehensive care that improves patient outcomes and reduces overall healthcare costs.

MS Australia CEO Rohan Greenland welcomed support from parliamentarians for their recognition of the MS Nurses shortage and the importance of addressing this issue.

“Investing in MS Nurse care is quite simply a win-win. It allows for high-quality care and support for people living with MS while creating solutions that provide a significant return on that investment and a benefit to the healthcare system and all Australians,” Mr Greenland said.

MS Australia President, Associate Professor Des Graham, and a person living with MS, says with the prevalence of MS on the rise, we cannot ignore the need for greater access to MS Nurses. 

“We look forward to partnering with the Government to ensure all Australians living with MS can access transformative MS Nurse care to live their best possible lives,” Associate Professor Graham said.                                                                                                                                     

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