Home doctor visits increasing

The amount of after hours general practitioner care received through a home visit has been increasing steadily since 2013-14.

In new results released from the 2016-17 Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) Patient Experience Survey, home visits made up over a quarter of all after hours GP visits.

ABS Director of Health Statistics Louise Gates said: "While the overall rate of seeing an after hours GP has remained stable at around one in 12 people (8 per cent) since 2013-14, the proportion of these people who had a home visit has more than doubled from 13 per cent in 2013-14 to 27 per cent in 2016-17."

"This increase in home visits is due to a decrease in the proportion of people visiting late night clinics, which fell from 26 per cent to 18 per cent, and those visiting an after hours clinic at a hospital, which fell from 19 per cent to 10 per cent. The proportion visiting a regular GP clinic after hours remained stable at 43 per cent."

In addition, the number of people who needed to see an after hours GP but did not see one at all decreased from 25 per cent in 2013-14 to 19 per cent in 2016-17.

People living in major cities were more likely to see an after hours GP than those living in outer regional, remote or very remote areas of Australia (9 per cent compared with 6 per cent).

At the same time, those living in outer regional, remote or very remote regions were almost twice as likely to report that the main reason they went to an emergency department instead of a GP was because a GP was not available when required (29 per cent compared with 17 per cent of those living in major cities).

3 comments

 

I  think  too many people are two darn lazy to haul their butts off to the surgery and are wasting the doctors' time and taxpayers' money.

Ray I am sure you would not be calling a Dr if you were not very ill and unable to go to the surgery

You'd be surprised how many people request unnecessary home visits. The reason for a lot of burnout in GPs who have now refused to do it, thus leaving an avenue and market open for the commercial companies with notoriously unskilled doctors.

This is placing some patients health in jeopardy. The government should have a crackdown on both patients who request home visits when they can visit the surgery and also the companies that cash in.

Too true re unnecessary visits Banjo. I thought the government made a start on that front.

June, 2017

Medical groups have largely welcomed a shake up of after-hours doctor visits recommended by the Federal Government's Medicare Benefits Schedule Review Taskforce.

Under the proposed changes, Medicare rebates would continue for home visits and after-hour visits provided by general practitioners or after-hours doctors services. But the higher rebates for "urgent after-hours services should only be payable to GPs who normally work during the day and believe a patient needs to see a doctor urgently," the taskforce found.

The findings of the review are open for public consultation. Once that is complete, Health Minister Greg Hunt will consider implementing recommendations.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-06-07/crackdown-on-after-hours-doctor-visits-welcomed-health-groups/8598024

Thanks for that reminder RnR. I had completely forgotten that this had commenced.

It is fiddling whist Rome burns . 

We should not as taxpayers be paying for free GPs visits for the wealthy .

I would not like an "after hours Dr" to be visiting me -- they have NO idea as to what you have and would have NO idea what or how to treat you-- they are -- and it has been proved just making a stack of money -- for doing nothing -- I will stick with MY Dr and or go to the Hospital thank you

The increase is due to a commercial company offering after hours at bulk billing . 

This is another example of mis use of bulk billing or Free GP visits no matter what your wealth . 

Bulk billing should be restricted to those with a health card . 

And the millions saved directed to pensioners who are living in poverty 

Yes Brocky this is a money making racket

3 comments



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