
International Day of the Midwife has just passed, and it’s a good moment to say what often doesn’t get said enough: midwives hold families together on the most intense days of their lives. Thank you for the skill, calm, advocacy, and resilience you bring to every shift.
If you’re a midwife in Australia quietly thinking, ‘I can’t keep doing it like this,’ you’re not alone. Sometimes it’s not that you’ve fallen out of love with midwifery — it’s that the environment you’re in has become unsustainable. The right move can protect your registration, your wellbeing, and your long-term career.
A change doesn’t have to be dramatic, and it doesn’t have to be rushed. The best moves are the ones you make with clear eyes and the right questions.
If you’re exploring midwife roles in Australia (including midwife roles in private hospitals), the questions below will help you assess safety, support, and fit — not just pay and location.
Ask for specifics, not slogans.
Most workplaces can say ‘we’re supportive’ or ‘we’re a great team’. The real question is: what happens on a busy day when the unit is stretched?
A supportive workplace can explain what they do when things get hard — not just when everything goes to plan. Listen for practical examples, not vague reassurance.
Different hospitals and units operate very differently, and ‘midwife’ can mean very different day-to-day work depending on the model.
Ask what your typical mix looks like:
Then ask the support question: if you’re stepping into a new area, how will they set you up to succeed? A good employer won’t just say ‘we’ll train you’ — they’ll be able to describe the process.
A role can look perfect on paper and still fall apart if onboarding is weak.
Ask:
If you’re moving hospitals, you’re already learning a new environment
This is where expectations and reality often diverge.
It’s worth asking about:
If you’re making a move to protect your work–life balance, this is non-negotiable. A roster that looks fine on paper can still be chaotic if it’s constantly changed.
Midwives thrive where clinical judgement is respected.
Ask questions that get to the heart of culture:
You’re not just assessing a role — you’re assessing whether you’ll be safe to practise. If the culture is ‘keep your head down’, that’s a red flag.
If you want a quick, trustworthy reference point on professional obligations and registration requirements, check the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA) guidance here:
https://www.ahpra.gov.au/Registration.aspx
If you want to progress, ask what the pathway looks like.
Development can mean different things depending on your goals:
A good employer will be able to describe real examples of midwives progressing — not just ‘we encourage development’.
This question is simple and revealing.
Before you accept any offer, it’s worth doing a quick self-check as well:
There’s no ‘perfect’ hospital, but there is a better fit for your season.
A move doesn’t have to be dramatic. Sometimes it’s just choosing a workplace that fits your season of life — whether that’s stability, better support, a new challenge, or a clearer pathway.
If you’re exploring midwife roles in Australia and want a straightforward, confidential conversation, we can help you understand what’s out there and what to ask before you commit.
If you’d like to be considered for current or upcoming midwife roles in Australia, send your CV to info@ihrgroup.com.au.
If you’re not sure your CV is ‘ready’, send it anyway — we’ll tell you honestly what’s worth improving and what isn’t.