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Posted: 2023-01-10 19:50:55

An $8-million housing project to accommodate health professionals in Victoria's Wimmera aims to address the region's crippling doctor shortage.

The 36-unit development at the end of Byrne Street, Horsham will be within walking distance of the city's hospital, which developer Stuart Benjamin says will help attract doctors who don't drive or don't want to.

More than half of the apartments will be compliant with accessibility requirements and eight will be dual-access apartments so hospital staff can live with their families.

They will also be soundproofed and have blackout curtains to allow staff to sleep around their shifts.

Doctors, nurses and allied health staff will be eligible to live in the units, including staff already working at the hospital and living in rentals around the city, Grampians Health chief executive Dale Fraser says.

Construction is scheduled to commence part-way through this year and it is expected hospital staff will be able to move in from the start of 2024.

"A new clinical year commences every February, so there's a changeover of junior doctors," Mr Fraser said.

"The key timeline for us to have some of these spaces available is February next year.

"No-one has reserved any accommodation yet, and we will make sure the spaces are allocated to those with the highest needs."

A patient transport vehicle at the entrance of Wimmera Base Hospital
Grampians Health's new housing development could have the added bonus of improving rental vacancy rates.(ABC Wimmera:Gillian Aeria)

Development to ease housing pressure

The Regional Australia Institute estimates there are currently 1,382 job vacancies for medical practitioners in regional Victoria and 1,131 positions vacant for carers and aides.

A key reason behind Horsham's shortage of medical specialists, according to Grampians Health allocations officer Di Schmidt, is a lack of suitable accommodation.

"I have lost pharmacists, social workers and nurses over the past 12 months or so because they can't get accommodation here in Horsham," Ms Schmidt told the ABC in June.

She also spoke about a couple from Queensland who moved to work in Horsham's emergency department and as specialised nurses.

"I think they applied for 30 houses and they both had jobs to come to," Ms Schmidt said.

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