The table shows how many physicians there were in Australia in the years 1986, 1996 and 2006, while the bar charts illustrate their distribution according to gender and the country of origin during the same period.
Overall, the infographics highlight a steady rise in the number of doctors over the two decades, the majority of whom were males, although the gap decreased with a gradual rise of their female counterparts. Australia also welcomed more non-native doctors, resulting in an equal distribution of native and foreigner doctors by the end.
The total number of these professionals stood at 23,720 in 1986. During each next decade surveyed, this figure grew more or less by 6,000, bringing the final population of doctors to a hefty 35,450.
When it comes to the gender and the birthplace of Australian doctors, it is clear that there were noticeable disparities in the first year. The overwhelming majority were males, at about 75%. They, however, saw a gradual decline to just over 60% in 2006, thanks to a rise in the number of women doctors over the period, finishing with about four out of ten. Similarly, roughly two-thirds of doctors were native Australians in 1986, but the rise of non-native ones eliminated this discrepancy, bringing to identical proportions for each group: 50%.
BAND 8.0-8.5
BAND 8.0+
#task1 #mock_writing #mix #alisher_types #aGoodOne
⚡️@alisherposts⚡️
⭐️@ad_astra_school⭐️
Overall, the infographics highlight a steady rise in the number of doctors over the two decades, the majority of whom were males, although the gap decreased with a gradual rise of their female counterparts. Australia also welcomed more non-native doctors, resulting in an equal distribution of native and foreigner doctors by the end.
The total number of these professionals stood at 23,720 in 1986. During each next decade surveyed, this figure grew more or less by 6,000, bringing the final population of doctors to a hefty 35,450.
When it comes to the gender and the birthplace of Australian doctors, it is clear that there were noticeable disparities in the first year. The overwhelming majority were males, at about 75%. They, however, saw a gradual decline to just over 60% in 2006, thanks to a rise in the number of women doctors over the period, finishing with about four out of ten. Similarly, roughly two-thirds of doctors were native Australians in 1986, but the rise of non-native ones eliminated this discrepancy, bringing to identical proportions for each group: 50%.
BAND 8.0-8.5
BAND 8.0+
#task1 #mock_writing #mix #alisher_types #aGoodOne
⚡️@alisherposts⚡️
⭐️@ad_astra_school⭐️