Advertising


News

RACGP President meets with Health Minister to discuss ‘pain points’


Michelle Wisbey


23/10/2023 3:37:52 PM

From payroll tax reform to telehealth, the NDIS and urgent care clinics, Dr Nicole Higgins sat down with Mark Butler to ensure GP voices are being heard.

RACGP President Nicole Higgins with Mark Butler.
RACGP President Dr Nicole Higgins and Health Minister Mark Butler at Parliament House.

The RACGP has laid bare its concerns around the future of general practice in a face-to-face meeting with Australia’s health heavyweights.
 
Visiting Canberra’s Parliament House last week, college President Dr Nicole Higgins met with Federal Health and Aged Care Minister Mark Butler and National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) Minister Bill Shorten for an honest, two-way conversation about GP concerns.
 
‘We don’t always agree with the Government’s decisions, but we need to be part of this reform process,’ Dr Higgins told newsGP.
 
‘We’ve got a really good working relationship with Minister Butler and his office, and that’s been reflected in our ability to meet regularly and to have a two-way dialogue.’
 
Across the course of the meeting, the RACGP raised the Medicare assignment of benefit for bulk-billed telehealth and the worry its caused GPs, as well as payroll tax reforms currently causing widespread concern and frustration.
 
They also discussed five new, nurse-led urgent care clinics recently opened in the Australian Capital Territory, and its broader messaging. 
 
‘This is sending the wrong message to GPs because we’ve been working really hard to work in multidisciplinary care teams and then to have urgent care centres without GP involvement was not how we’d been working together,’ Dr Higgins said.
 
‘They acknowledged that and said that their preferred model is GP-led, so we’ll continue working with that.’
 
In conversation with Minister Shorten, Dr Higgins said she advocated for the need for GPs to be more involved in the NDIS rollout and how they can better help those who use it.
 
‘GPs were not included in the design of the NDIS and that has a huge impact on patients and GPs,’ she said.
 
‘GPs are essential to the process, and moving forward, we spoke about how we can get the reforms to incorporate GPs into planning, services, and coordination and continuity of care.’
 
The meeting occurred amid the backdrop of significant planned reforms of Australia’s health system, with the recent introduction of MyMedicare and Minister Butler’s frequent references to healthcare workers reaching their ‘top of scope’.
 
The ‘Unleashing the Potential of our Health Workforce Review‘, announced last month, is aimed at ensuring Australia is optimising the skills and training of its medical professionals.
 
Dr Higgins said she spoke with Minister Butler about GPs’ scope of practice, their extensive medical training, and the current barriers stopping them reaching their full potential as healthcare professionals.
 
‘GPs have the same first eight years of training as our cardiologists, as brain surgeons, and psychiatrists, and then we branch off into the community and they branch off into their area,’ she said.
 
‘So those first eight years of common training is what gives us the depth and breadth to practice at the top of our scope.
 
‘The biggest barrier that we face – it’s not our training – it’s legislation, regulatory barriers, it’s red tape.’
 
And at a time when GPs are facing burnout, workforce shortages and rising costs, Dr Higgins said the meeting left her hopeful for the future.
 
‘Yes, we are being heard. Yes, we are at the table at a time when the profession is going undergoing huge change, and future reform,’ she said.
 
‘We must be able to keep the Government accountable, and there’s sometimes tension in the relationship, but it’s a healthy tension.’
 
Log in below to join the conversation.



Mark Butler Medicare NDIS payroll tax telehealth


newsGP weekly poll Is it becoming more difficult to access specialist psychiatric support for patients with complex mental presentations?
 
97%
 
1%
 
0%
Related





newsGP weekly poll Is it becoming more difficult to access specialist psychiatric support for patients with complex mental presentations?

Advertising

Advertising


Login to comment

Dr Tosan   24/10/2023 7:05:59 AM

So what did the Minister say about Telehealth and all the unnecessary paper work needed to obtain consent before bulk billing ? Did he make any commitment to rescind it?


Dr Geoffrey Ronald Greig   24/10/2023 12:23:11 PM

As a co-owner of a mid size general practice for 20+ years there has never been a worse time to be a gp or an owner. Constantly increasing red tape, costs and uncertainty forced on us by the 2 levels of government oversee us. Despite public declarations of support for us both levels are constantly undermining us either through red tape, sneaky reductions in payments ( 6 minute item 23 and 91891), threat of retrospective taxes , giving our work constantly to less qualified professions.
I despair re the future for general practice and glad to only have a few more years of working. Heaven help the upcoming generation of gp’s and their patients


Dr Sharnee Ellen Rutherford   25/10/2023 2:07:48 PM

Mental Health consultations are not being indexed to keep pace with usual consultations. If medicare wants to keep having access to the data on the 2713 it needs to at least on a par with a 36, the same timed based normal consultation. Otherwise, what's the point of a 2713 really? Just to trigger the psychologists sessions, that's all

The same thing happened when a 16500 was less than a 23, for the same time, same content . GPs suddenly weren't doing antenatal care? or they weren't claiming the lesser amount being the antenatal care item number. It took years to fix it, but they finally did.
Also, can I please have longer than 20 minutes to look after a housebound patient with a phone consultation. They may have had a hip replacement 5 days ago and can't drive, or be 92 and no-one can bring them or they just might be a suicidal 12 yo who has locked their parents out of their room and won't speak to them ( I know, I had 2 in one week)


Dr Matt Harvey   28/10/2023 11:12:44 AM

Good, we’re being heard. What are they hearing and what remedies will they propose? They reduce rebates to patients for consults that meet the complexity requirements for level 23 but are completed in less than 6 minutes. So patients get penalised by seeing a GP who can handle complex matters quickly and effectively. They penalise patients with a lower rebate for pure mental health consults outside of FPS. They penalise patients with limited rebates for telephone consultations when those patients can’t physically attend and can’t manage video Telehealth. And there’s this expectation that GPs should subside that: from politicians, from the public, and from within our profession. Make it a voter issue and educate the public. Stop subsiding Medicare, colleagues!