Monday 23 November 2009 | 03:20 PM AEST

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Valuing the future of rural pharmacy

Pharmacy students studying at Charles Sturt University (CSU) have secured valuable financial assistance for their four years of study through the nationally competitive Rural and Remote Pharmacy Scholarship Scheme.
 
CSU pharmacy students secured financial assistance for 2008 through the Rural and Remote Pharmacy Scholarship Scheme.More than 30 scholarships, each valued at $10 000 a year for four years of study, were offered in 2008 as well as participation in a mentor program. The Scholarship Scheme is funded by the federal Department of Health and Ageing and is administered by the Pharmacy Guild of Australia.
 
The Rural Pharmacy Scholarships were established to provide financial support to students from rural and remote communities, to encourage and enable them to undertake undergraduate studies in pharmacy at university.
 
A total of 15 students studying pharmacy at CSU’s Orange and Wagga Wagga campuses are among those named as successful scholarship recipients in 2008. They came from regional Victoria and NSW as well as on the north and south coasts of NSW.
 
“The Scheme is proving extremely valuable in supporting students from rural and remote areas to undertake pharmacy, as those coming from rural and particularly remote Australia have a number of barriers and hidden costs to face in getting themselves to university,” said Professor of Rural Pharmacy at CSU, Patrick Ball.
 
"Many pharmacy graduates from CSU have now purchased a stake in a business in rural Australia as around 70 per cent of them began their careers in rural or remote pharmacy. When they attend CSU, many students also develop long-standing relationships, strengthening their ties to rural Australia. 
 
"We believe the Scholarship Scheme is a highly beneficial investment in the future of rural and remote pharmacy in Australia. That our students figure so strongly in the Scheme reflects both the regions from which we draw students and the quality of our candidates and our programme,” said Professor Ball.



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