 I'm a physiotherapist. I graduated seven years ago from the University of Brighton and my love for Australia happened many years ago and so I thought I'd try and combine the two and work out in Australia as a physio. We are definitely looking for physiotherapists in fact in a wide range of allied health professionals in Western Australia. I also met somebody this evening who introduced me to the possibility of working in a new hospital in Western Australia which is due to open in 2014 so that's quite an exciting opportunity as well. Essentially in Australia we are not training medical professionals in the numbers and with the speed that we need to support our growing economy. At the moment more than 50% of Australians don't have access to the appropriate level of health services. Overseas health professionals have been key to helping us to bridge that gap. At any one time in rural and remote Australia we have up to 600 vacancies so that's 600 opportunities there for UK doctors or doctors from around the world to come and work out in rural and remote Australia. So there's communities out there without doctors and without skilled migrants these communities would be underserved and have to travel hundreds of kilometres to get medical help. The shortages that we have in Victoria are significant and we certainly can't meet the needs of our clients and it's to do really with the fact that health's a growing industry we've got an ageing population and there's a high demand for skilled nurses so we always need more. At the moment we're looking for GPs, we're looking for nurses, we're looking for specialists we are looking for people in some of the more specialised areas of medical profession speech pathologists, physiotherapists these people take a long time to train and yes there is a lot of emphasis being put on training Australians but we have a gap at the moment. Overseas health professionals have helped us to fill that gap and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future.