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ACEM response to VIC and NSW urgent care services announcement

Access to affordable and accessible primary care is extremely important in the creation of an equitable and efficient health system that meets the needs of all Australians. The College supports successful initiatives that improve access to primary care – particularly access to care in rural, regional, and remote areas, where the healthcare crisis is hitting hardest.

These announced – if appropriately planned, located, financed, staffed, integrated into existing systems, and reviewed – could give people faster care for urgent but non-critical conditions. They may also cause a small reduction in low acuity ED presentations.

However, while these services may reduce presentations to emergency departments, they are unlikely to solve the current crisis.

This is because the biggest issue contributing to emergency department pressures are not the patients who can be treated and sent home – and could therefore be seen by an urgent care service.

The contributing to pressures on emergency departments are the patients who cannot be treated and sent home as they require inpatient care – so could not receive the care they need at an urgent care service.

The issue leading to emergency department pressures are the patients who are too sick, or too injured to go home. So, after being assessed and treated in the ED these patients require further care – either in hospital or in community care – but there is no space, or resources, for them to receive this care.

These patients then suffer long waits, stuck in the emergency department. This then creates a bottleneck in the ED that leads to overcrowding, ambulance ramping, excessively long waits for care, staff burnout and distress, and poorer patient outcomes, that can include death.

This issue can only be fixed by an increase in significant resourcing across the health system, and particularly into inpatient capacity to accept patients.

The College also awaits further information about the proposed staffing of these urgent care services. ACEM is concerned that without adequate planning these services might divert precious workforce away from EDs and lead to a disruption of longitudinal care.

ACEM and other health stakeholders have been advocating for solutions to the healthcare workforce crisis, and public attention has been drawn recently to the lack of Specialised General Practitioners (GPs) and nursing staff, particularly senior nursing staff, across the health system.

Background:

ACEM is the peak body for emergency medicine in Australia and New Zealand, responsible for training emergency physicians and advancement of professional standards.

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