Emergence of Waikato's New Medical School Amid National Doctor Shortages
New Zealand's healthcare system faces persistent challenges with doctor shortages, particularly in rural and primary care settings. With nearly 900,000 Kiwis living rurally yet only 2% of general practitioners (GPs) serving those areas, the pressure is mounting. To address this, the government approved the establishment of the New Zealand Graduate School of Medicine (NZGSM) at the University of Waikato in July 2025, with groundbreaking in December 2025 and first students arriving in 2028. This third medical school aims to train 120 additional doctors annually, focusing on graduate-entry students geared toward primary and rural practice.
The programme's structure is innovative: a four-year Doctor of Medicine (MD) degree where year one involves intensive biomedical and social health studies on the Hamilton campus using digital tools like virtual reality (VR) anatomy labs and simulation wards. Years two through four shift to immersive clinical placements in regional hospitals, general practices, and community services across New Zealand. This model draws from successful international examples, such as partnerships with the University of Wollongong, to boost rural doctor retention—students trained rurally are six times more likely to practice there long-term.
Teething Disputes Surface Over Clinical Placement Locations
As planning accelerates, teething issues have arisen, particularly around securing clinical placements for the incoming cohort of 120 students. Clinical placements—supervised hands-on training in real healthcare settings—are essential for medical education, comprising the bulk of years two to four. However, letters from the University of Otago reveal concerns that Waikato's proposed sites in Christchurch and Nelson overlap with Otago's significant investments, including the $300 million Wai Ora building dedicated to student training.
Otago and Auckland, New Zealand's established medical schools training 639 students annually (up from 589 in 2024 with government boosts), initially opposed the new school, advocating for their own expansions instead. Fears center on 'retrenchment'—Waikato claiming spots without consultation, potentially forcing existing schools to scramble for alternatives. The Ministry of Health's internal risk register echoes this, warning of no net capacity gain but mere redistribution.
Stakeholder Views: Universities, GPs, and Government Clash and Collaborate
University of Otago Vice-Chancellor Grant Robertson described the tensions as 'teething issues,' noting positive recent discussions with Health Minister Simeon Brown. Otago's letters urged collaborative planning over unilateral moves. Waikato University, meanwhile, emphasizes ongoing engagement with Health New Zealand (Te Whatu Ora) and regional communities, with placements slated for finalization by June 2026.
GPs, via the Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners President Dr. Luke Bradford, highlight supervision strains: 'There currently are constraints without doubt,' with practices already resorting to remote training. The Resident Doctors’ Association's Deborah Powell advocates broadening beyond hospitals to rural hubs. Minister Brown champions a national approach: 'Bringing them together to work on what is in the national interest—training more doctors and keeping them here.'
- Otago/Auckland: Protect investments, seek consultation.
- Waikato: Regional focus, partnerships for diverse placements.
- GPs/Residents: Urgent need for more supervision capacity.
- Government: New board for equitable allocation.
Underlying Capacity Challenges in New Zealand's Medical Training
New Zealand's two existing schools place students in over 100 locations yearly, yet general practice capacity lags. A stocktake showed 14% fewer practices accepting undergraduates due to rising student numbers and registrar displacements. Health NZ projects a GP shortfall of 753-1,043 by 2042, with rural areas hit hardest—130 'missing' rural GPs currently.
International reliance exacerbates vulnerabilities: NZ has the OECD's highest proportion of overseas-trained doctors, with only 40% retention after two years versus 95% for locals. Graduate-entry models like Waikato's promise better alignment with population needs, including Māori health equity.
For those eyeing medical careers, resources like academic CV tips can aid applications to programs like NZGSM.
Waikato's Curriculum: Tailored for Rural and Primary Care Success
The NZGSM's graduate-entry pathway targets mature students from diverse backgrounds, requiring a bachelor's degree (B average) and GAMSAT exam. Admissions prioritize those likely to serve rural NZ, with interviews assessing fit. The 'digital-first' curriculum integrates VR, case studies, and simulations before regional immersions, fostering GPs, emergency physicians, and psychiatrists—fields critical to underserved areas.
Partnerships with University of Canterbury expand South Island options, while MOUs with primary health organizations build multidisciplinary hubs. This addresses Māori health disparities, as rural training improves outcomes for indigenous communities through culturally responsive care.
Learn more about NZGSM admissionsGovernment's Solution: A National Medical Training Board
In response, a new Medical Training Board is forming to oversee placements nationwide, ensuring hospitals and primary care spots for all schools without poaching. This centralized governance, per Cabinet papers, uses transparent criteria: health needs, readiness, investments. Phased implementation includes business cases by late 2025 and July 2026 for infrastructure.
Complementing this, initiatives like 100 overseas-trained doctor placements and 50 NZ graduate GP rotations aim to ease immediate pressures. Rural health hubs could unlock further capacity.
Impacts on Students and the Future Health Workforce
For the 120 inaugural Waikato students, unresolved disputes risk delayed or suboptimal placements, affecting skill-building. However, the board promises stability. Long-term, expect 120 more primary-focused doctors yearly, reducing ED overuse and rural travel times. With total intake hitting 759 by 2028, NZ could close its 1,700-3,400 doctor gap by 2032.
| School | Annual Intake (2026+) | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Auckland | ~320 | Urban/Comprehensive |
| Otago | ~319 | Multi-campus/Rural |
| Waikato | 120 | Rural/Primary Care |
Academic positions in medical education are booming; check faculty jobs at NZ universities.
Equity Gains for Māori and Regional Communities
Waikato's model promotes workforce diversity, mirroring NZ's demographics to tackle inequities. Rural training enhances Māori health access, reducing barriers like long travel. Evidence shows such graduates improve outcomes via community-embedded care.
Photo by Gaurav Kumar on Unsplash
Outlook: Resolving Issues for a Stronger Medical Pipeline
By June 2026, finalized placements and the training board should iron out disputes, positioning NZ for self-sufficient doctor supply. Optimism prevails post-ministerial talks, with Waikato's building on track for 2027 completion. This expansion not only alleviates shortages but elevates regional higher education. Aspiring educators and clinicians can explore opportunities via university jobs, higher ed jobs, Rate My Professor, and career advice on AcademicJobs.com. For NZ-specific roles, visit our NZ section.
Read the full 1News report on placement concerns
Government announcement on school progress
