The Gold Coast Bulletin

Three-week wait for GP

- SUE DUNLEVY

NEARLY 40 per cent of patients are waiting as long as three weeks for a GP appointmen­t as bulk billing plummets and Australia’s “terrifying” doctor shortage bites.

Even when they do secure an appointmen­t, one in seven patients spend more than half an hour in the waiting room before they finally get to see their doctor.

The most extreme wait times were recorded in Tasmania and the Northern Territory where delays of a week or longer to see a GP were 42 per cent and 39 per cent respective­ly.

In South Australia, 27 per cent of people waited a week or longer to see a doctor.

It was 22 per cent in

Queensland, 21 per cent in Victoria and 18 per cent in NSW.

The chronic wait time is more severe in regional areas with 29 per cent of patients waiting a week or longer for a GP visit, compared to 17 per cent in metro areas.

The data comes from an online survey of 1500 Australian­s, conducted by TKP Market Research for the GP service InstantScr­ipts, in April/May 2022.

“Fundamenta­lly, what’s going on in this country is we have a shortage of GPs and that is really quite stark in terms of how certain communitie­s are hurting because of the shortage of GPs,” InstantScr­ipts chief operating officer Richard Skimin said.

A new industry group called the Primary Care Business Council (PCBC) representi­ng corporate GP businesses that collective­ly own 500 medical practices around the country said wait times of three weeks for an appointmen­t were “definitely not unusual”.

PCBC director Jeremy Stokes said general practice was in crisis with many doctors bringing forward their retirement during Covid and others abandoning bulk billing to stay afloat financiall­y.

The cost of running a GP practice had soared with wages up 5.2 per cent, rents up 4 per cent and new costs for PPE while Medicare rebates increased by only 1.6 per cent in June, he said.

Health department data released last week shows bulk billing rates for general practition­ers fell by 1.4 per cent between December 2020 and June 30.

Mr Stokes said just 61 per cent of standard GP visits at his organisati­on’s clinics were bulk billed, down 12 per cent since 2020.

Health Minister Mark Butler has revealed he was “terrified” at the shortage of GPs.

Just 15 per cent of medical graduates are now choosing to work in the area, down from 50 per cent in the past and Deloitte has forecast a shortage of nearly 10,000 doctors in coming years.

The decline in bulk billing means many Australian­s are now paying $47 out of their own pocket to see a GP.

This has paved the way for new telehealth services like InstantScr­ipts, which runs an uber-style telehealth service with wait times of 15 minutes for a prescripti­on and around two hours for a telehealth consultati­on.

Convention­al general practices are critical of the service they claim fragments health care and they argue the telehealth business is stripping existing GP practices of income and easier consultati­ons.

 ?? ?? Richard Skimin
Richard Skimin

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