Poorer Australian regions lose out in ‘flawed’ allocation of doctors, says GP body
System of identifying shortages leads to skewing of resources towards wealthier areas, says Royal Australian College of General Practitioners
Several poorer, rural regions are being disadvantaged by the way the Australian government identifies significant doctor shortages, while some wealthy areas are being classified as needing extra resources.
The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners has argued the system - which determines which regions need additional resources - is flawed and is exacerbating rural GP workforce shortages.
Doctors trained overseas are crucial to easing GP shortages across the country because for their first 10 years in Australia they must work in areas of need, known as a distribution priority area, in order to access Medicare benefits.
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