“No one should miss out”: RACGP calls for urgent rural NDIS boost

Image from the RACGP

Royal Australian College of GPs Media Release

The Royal Australian College of GPs (RACGP) is calling on government to boost the National Disability Insurance Scheme in the bush.

It comes following the College’s submission to the inquiry into NDIS participant experience in rural, regional, and remote Australia.

RACGP President Dr Nicole Higgins said that no communities should be left behind.

“No person with a disability, irrespective of where they live, should miss out on the care and support they need,” she said.

“The NDIS is a game changer full of opportunities, but people with a disability in the bush are being left behind. We have the solutions to significantly improve the NDIS outside of major cities.

“The Medicare rebate system makes our job helping patients looking to access the NDIS near impossible, and that must change. A GP’s time is sorely limited, and we aren’t remunerated for the time spent writing lengthy reports to support NDIS applications when patients aren’t present.

“This is particularly challenging outside of our cities, as rural GPs work within a varied scope due to limited local health services and play such a versatile role meeting the diverse needs of their community. So, for them, there is an even higher administrative and financial burden. Also, Medicare doesn’t adequately recognise the work we do coordinating multidisciplinary care teams and we’re not supported to liaise with NDIS service providers.

“So, the Government must reform Medicare or explore alternative solutions to help GPs help patients on the NDIS, something that is especially important in the bush. This includes providing adequate remuneration for GPs so that we’re paid for time spent preparing reports and other paperwork. We also recommend expanding the list of disability-related health supports funded by the NDIS to include some general practice supports not covered by Medicare.

“The entire rural and remote health system must be operating efficiently to get patients proper NDIS care and support. Right now, that just isn’t happening. Patients in the bush tell me about long wait times and having to travel gruelling distances, at their own expense, to access specialist care and other services. Inferior telecommunications infrastructure is holding back the potential of telehealth consults. There also just aren’t enough workers or available services, with one rural GP telling me about patients stuck on waitlists for two years just to seek appropriate evidence to submit their NDIS paperwork. Imagine the toll this is taking on patients just trying to get the right kind of support to make their lives that much easier.”

RACGP Vice President and Rural Chair, Associate Professor Michael Clements, said that the Government must repair a two-tiered NDIS.

“The Government must urgently plug holes in NDIS service provision in the bush,” he said.

“Right now, we have a two-tiered NDIS – one for people in major cities, another for people living everywhere else. Rural GPs tell me about concerns regarding the quality of supports in rural and remote communities due to limited resources and an often under-skilled workforce. This is not to criticise workers doing their best in a challenging situation, it’s a system-wide issue. These same GPs also warn about a lack of transparency in understanding what services have been provided to patients by their support teams.

“So, the Government should make fixing the NDIS workforce in the bush a priority, including minimum checks and training requirements. Let’s not stop there, the Government should recruit advocacy-specific workers who understand the needs of rural communities and can fight for people in these communities. We also need annual reporting to be implemented for each NDIS participant so that GPs are kept in the loop.

“Let’s also make the NDIS as inclusive as possible. GPs have spoken to me about the need for further investment in culturally informed and appropriate care for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people accessing the NDIS and concerted efforts made to recruit Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people to become NDIS support workers.”

The RACGP Vice President said that GPs should be spending more time helping patients and less time on paperwork.

“I call on the Government to give time-poor GPs a break when it comes to red tape,” he said.

“The paperwork is cumbersome and inefficiently designed, we shouldn’t have to be experts in using the right type of phrasing to obtain approvals and the NDIS forms don’t integrate with our common Clinical Information Systems. This is a waste of time and energy, particularly for busy GPs in the bush, that could be spent helping patients with a disability.

“The NDIS is changing the lives of people across Australia, and I don’t want anyone, regardless of where they live, to be left behind. Let’s make this scheme even better and make sure that patients in the bush are always front of mind.”

 

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3 Comments

  1. “The entire rural and remote health system must be operating efficiently to get patients proper NDIS care and support. Right now, that just isn’t happening. Patients in the bush tell me about long wait times and having to travel gruelling distances, at their own expense, to access specialist care and other services. Inferior telecommunications infrastructure is holding back the potential of telehealth consults. There also just aren’t enough workers or available services, with one rural GP telling me about patients stuck on waitlists for two years just to seek appropriate evidence to submit their NDIS paperwork. Imagine the toll this is taking on patients just trying to get the right kind of support to make their lives that much easier.”

    It is all well and good to say people in the bush are doing it tough………………..but it is never going to be a viable prospect to have “city level” services in every small country town.
    People live in the bush by choice and long travel distances and reduced services is just a fact of life. It is what it is.

  2. Increasingly people live in ‘regional’, ‘rural’, ‘remote’ areas to be able to afford a dwelling by ownership or rent. They simply cannot afford to live in cities. So people do not necessarily live in these areas by choice. Gov’t policies produce these ‘devil’s alternatives’, so reduced services should not be ” … just a fact of life.”

  3. Australian voters in regional and rote Australia should have metro standard for ALL GOVERNMENT SERVICES!!!!!

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