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 Suicide rates highlight urgent need for more bush GPs 

Suicide rates highlight urgent need for more bush GPs

04 Oct, 2009 02:00 AM
"WORRYING" rates of rural suicides, homicides and fatal accidents highlight urgent need for governments to get procedural GPs to the bush.

The Rural Doctors Association of Australia (RDAA) says a report showing a significantly higher rate of suicides, homicides and fatal accidents in rural and remote Australia, compared with those in the cities, is an urgent reminder to the federal and state governments that they must do more to get and keep in the bush more GPs who have advanced training in emergency, surgical and anaesthetic care.

The report by the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW), Injury deaths, Australia 2004-05, has found that, overall, rates of injury-related death in Australia during 2004-05 increased with the remoteness of the injured person’s residence, with those who resided in very remote areas having a rate more than double that of the national rate.

"Yet the federal and state governments continue to largely ignore the urgent need for measures that would attract and retain in the bush more procedural GPs who are trained in advanced emergency, surgical and anaesthetic care," RDAA president, Dr Nola Maxfield, said.

"Country communities across Australia are crying out for more rural procedural GPs who have the additional training and experience needed to provide emergency anaesthetic, resuscitation and surgical care.

"Many of the rural doctors who are currently undertaking this much-needed work are getting older and nearing retirement or simply burning-out."

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Any doctor would be a great help. The doctors in the central area of Tasmania are fast reaching retirement age and they have to source locums from Queensland. We need more doctors in rural areas now. The problem is that with insufficient doctors, the hours the ones we have work are extremely unattractive and therefore young doctors don't want to work in the bush. Who else puts in 8 to 14 hour plus days. Is on call at all hours and weekends. Let some of the politicians try a rural GPs workload and see how they like it. Doctors in rural areas deserve a hell of a better deal than they get now. It is no wonder they can empathise with farmers because the only reason they would work in the bush is for the love of it not the money.
Posted by Helen Clark, 4/10/2009 10:20:17 AM

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