Curriculum development in intellectual disability health

Health professionals need the right knowledge, skills and attitudes to care for people with intellectual disability. The Curriculum Development Project will support universities and accreditation authorities to improve pre-registration education for health professionals to better meet this need.

About

The Australian Government released the National Roadmap for Improving the Health of People with Intellectual Disability to address serious health inequities faced by people with intellectual disability.

A priority of the roadmap is the Curriculum Development in Intellectual Disability Health Project.

A key of the project was to develop the Intellectual Disability Health Capability Framework. The framework sets out clear capabilities, learning outcomes and guides for universities and accreditation authorities. The framework aims to support universities to improve education and training for health students. This will help health students have the right knowledge, skills and attitudes to care for people with intellectual disability. We released the framework in April 2024. 

An Easy Read summary of the framework is also available, including an Easy Read resource about how people with intellectual disability can use the framework as an advocacy tool. For more information, you can watch a video about the framework.

To support implementation of the Framework, the Department has partnered with the University of New South Wales Sydney to develop free education resources. This includes guides and resources to:

  • support universities to apply intellectual disability health care principles into their pre-registration education courses.
  • support accreditation authorities to consider accreditation standards that show the importance of intellectual disability health capabilities.

Educators can use the resources to teach university students about intellectual disability health. All the resources have been co-designed with people with intellectual disability.

These people/organisations helped us with the project:

  • people with intellectual disability
  • their families, carers and support workers
  • accreditation authorities
  • academic experts and universities
  • health professionals.

To support the project we have:

Once established, the National Centre of Excellence in Intellectual Disability Health will host the framework and supporting resources on its knowledge hub.

Funding

We allocated $4.7 million over 4 years (from 2021–2022 to 2024–2025) to this project.

Goals

The project aims to:

  • have the health needs of people with intellectual disability recognised by universities and accreditation authorities 
  • have intellectual disability health content and principles included in pre-registration education courses
  • have the Intellectual Disability Health Capability Framework included or referenced in accreditation standards 
  • increase access to resources on intellectual disability health for education providers, students, and health practitioners.

Timeline 

June – December 2022

  • Scoping and gap analysis of undergraduate training
  • Co-design of core capabilities with people with intellectual disability
  • Public Consultation on core capabilities.

January – June 2023

  • Refine final core capabilities
  • Develop implementation guidelines and supporting resources for the framework
  • Prepare a monitoring and evaluation interim report.

July – December 2023

  • Public consultation on the framework (October 2023)
  • Continued development of supporting resources for the framework.

January – June 2024

  • Final framework delivered
  • Implementation support and promotion.

July 2024 – June 2025

  • Resources published on the department’s website.
  • Monitoring and evaluation final report
  • Implementation support and promotion.

Expert advisory group

We established the Intellectual Disability Health Education and Training Expert Advisory Group (EAG) in February 2022. The EAG provides expert advice and guidance on education and training actions under the roadmap.

The EAG supported the planning and delivery of this project. This included providing advice about:

  • health professional undergraduate education
  • intellectual disability health learning outcomes and accreditation
  • resources to support the framework.

The EAG includes representatives from:

  • the education sector
  • intellectual disability academic experts
  • accreditation and registration bodies
  • the Indigenous, health and disability sector
  • people with lived experience.

Resources

Contact

For more information about the Curriculum Development Project, please contact us.

Intellectual disability health contact

Contact us for more information about our programs and initiatives for intellectual disability health.
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