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The time you spend doing the MTS is helping improve medical training! Read how MTS results are being used to drive change.
Doing the MTS is worth your time, because your data is making a difference.
The results for previous Medical Training Surveys (MTS) are available in the Results section of the website. The results can be accessed in a variety of formats; static reports, high-level snapshots and via the interactive data dashboard where you can create your own tailored reports.
You can create your own report using the ‘advanced filters’ and/or comparison tool in the Create your own report section of this website.
Use the ‘advanced filters’ and/or comparison tool in the data dashboard to select the fields you want, hit ‘apply’ and the specific results you’ve requested will be displayed (providing confidentiality thresholds have been met). You can download the results or have a PDF or Excel report emailed to you by submitting your email when you are ready to generate your report. It will take no longer than 1 business day to receive your report.
The 2025 MTS has now closed.
Doctors in training are shaping the future of medical education—one response at a time
Every year, the Medical Training Survey (MTS) provides a national platform for doctors in training to share their experiences—and in 2025, your participation has once again made an impact.
Why your voice matters
By doing the MTS, you’re helping build a clearer picture of what’s working—and what needs to change—in medical training across Australia. Educators, employers, regulators and policymakers use your insights to improve supervision, workplace culture, wellbeing and learning environments.
Your data is already informing change that wouldn’t be possible without you!
What’s next?
Thank you
To every doctor in training who took the time to do the MTS this year: a big thank you....
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“We’re listening.”
That’s the headline message to doctors in training from the new Chair of the Medical Training Survey (MTS), Dr Brooke Sheldon.
Also Chair of the Tasmanian Board of the Medical Board of Australia, Dr Sheldon says MTS results are already being applied to positive affect, with stakeholders harnessing its invaluable insights.
“Employers and educators know it’s a buyer’s market. They are very responsive to trainee feedback and are using MTS data as a quality assurance tool to identify areas for improvement,” she said.
‘New medical graduates are using MTS data to find out where training is good and where culture is supportive. MTS data provides the evidence base informing their training choices,” she said.
Dr Sheldon plans to draw on her background in medical education, experience in primary care and passion for driving positive change in the culture of medicine in her work with the MTS.
‘I’m really passionate about medical culture, and...
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New questions bring new insights: Medical Training Survey results strengthen data value
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander medical trainees report experiencing and/or witnessing racism at more than double the rate of colleagues, the latest Medical Training Survey (MTS) has found.
Results of the 2024 MTS also reveal more than 1,000 trainees (five per cent) reported experiencing and/or witnessing sexual harassment.
One third of trainees (33%) reported having experienced and/or witnessed bullying, discrimination, harassment, sexual harassment and/or racism, spiking to 54% of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander trainees and 44% of interns.
Medical Board of Australia Chair, Dr Anne Tonkin AO, said 38% of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander trainees reported experiencing or witnessing racism, compared to 17% of other trainees.
‘I am appalled by what Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander trainees report. Clearly, our efforts to strengthen cultural safety in medicine and the health system more widely are urgent and well targeted. Our health system...
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