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‘Concept of family doctors in NZ dead’: GPs warn of primary care collapse in NZ

Author
Michael Morrah,
Publish Date
Wed, 4 Sep 2024, 8:38am

‘Concept of family doctors in NZ dead’: GPs warn of primary care collapse in NZ

Author
Michael Morrah,
Publish Date
Wed, 4 Sep 2024, 8:38am

- General Practitioners Aotearoa warns the family doctor concept is dead and call for urgent Government action.

- Patients face long waits, with some queuing from 6am due to long wait times and limited appointments.

- Dr Buzz Burrell criticises Government鈥檚 4% funding increase as inadequate for primary care needs.

A group representing GPs has issued a bleak assessment of the state of primary care in New Zealand, saying 鈥渢he concept of a family doctor is dead鈥, and the Government must act before there鈥檚 wider health sector collapse.

The comments from the advocacy group General Practitioners Aotearoa (GPA) were made following听revelations in the听Herald听that patients were queuing from 6am outside a GP and urgent care clinic in 艑tara.

Patients waited at the clinic hours before it opened telling the听Herald听they turned up early in the cold because of long wait times and difficulty getting appointments with other GPs whose books were full.

The GPA鈥檚 interim chairman Dr Buzz Burrell said the听Herald鈥檚 video story was shocking and should serve as a wake-up call for all of New Zealand and the Government.

鈥淚t [the听Herald鈥檚 video] was probably the most frightening demonstration of inequity that you could possibly ask for in primary care in New Zealand.鈥

People wait in line early in the morning to be seen at a general practice in 艑tara. Photo / Ben DickensPeople wait in line early in the morning to be seen at a general practice in 艑tara. Photo / Ben Dickens

Burrell likened the scenes captured in the video to a 鈥淭hird World鈥 health system.

鈥淲e expect to see pictures like that in Third World countries like Bangladesh and Myanmar, but not in New Zealand. I think probably what鈥檚 also heartbreaking is you probably wouldn鈥檛 see that in Remuera,鈥 he said.

Patients, including the most vulnerable, were facing unacceptable waits across New Zealand, which was dangerous, he said.

鈥淭he primary healthcare system is sick. The concept of a family doctor is already dead. Patients all over the country have to wait weeks to see a doctor at their usual clinic, and even then, they鈥檙e unlikely to see their regular doctor.鈥

True family medicine involved continuity of care, where a patient could see the same GP over and over when they needed to, he said.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 so close to dead that we might as well call it out for what it is. There are pockets of hope, but they鈥檙e getting less and less and less. It鈥檚 a frightening statement and it鈥檚 really sad.鈥

General Practitioners Aotearoa interim chairman Dr Buzz Burrell says patients, including the most vulnerable, are facing unacceptable waits across New Zealand. Photo / Corey Fleming General Practitioners Aotearoa interim chairman Dr Buzz Burrell says patients, including the most vulnerable, are facing unacceptable waits across New Zealand. Photo / Corey Fleming

Burrell, who鈥檚 been a GP and rural hospital specialist for 30 years, didn鈥檛 believe the Government was prioritising general practice because it was 鈥渢oo unsexy鈥 for politicians who preferred to campaign on hospital-level care.

鈥淓ventually, we are going to have a tipping point where we will have so few GPs that people are going to be overwhelming the emergency departments.鈥

He said if just 6% of patients went to emergency departments instead of their local doctor, this would double ED presentations.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 a really alarming statistic. It shows how close we are to a secondary sector collapse.鈥

He said GPs were 鈥渞un ragged鈥,听short staffed and overloaded with paperwork, which was ultimately putting patient safety at risk.

鈥淲e are inevitably going see missed diagnoses. Early cancers being found late, people dying of cardiovascular disease, dying of other preventable illnesses because we鈥檙e not catching them.鈥

Health Minister Shane Reti says telehealth is one way to reduce the burden of primary care providers. Photo /  Ben DickensHealth Minister Shane Reti says telehealth is one way to reduce the burden of primary care providers. Photo / Ben Dickens

Health Minister Shane Reti told the听Herald听technology has a role to play in easing the administrative burden.

鈥淩educing this burden will involve solutions such as telehealth and inbox management,鈥 he said.

Health New Zealand has proposed a 4% increase in funding for GP clinics and a provision to allow practices to increase their fees.

The offer has been widely panned by doctors, including the General Practice Leaders Forum chairwoman听Dr Samantha Murton, who described the offer as 鈥渦nacceptable鈥.

Burrell agreed the offer was disappointing.

鈥淎 4% increase in the funding is not even a drop in the ocean. It should have been 140%,鈥 he said.

Asked whether he felt the Government was prioritising general practice, Burrell said 鈥渁bsolutely not鈥 and was disappointed with the minister

鈥淚 think we were all looking forward to a GP [the minister] coming in all guns blazing, and in the first 100 days promising and then delivering on hugely improving general practice.鈥

A spokeswoman for Reti said the GP workforce is critical to New Zealand.

鈥淭he minister absolutely recognises and values the passion of doctors such as Buzz Burrell,鈥 she said.

鈥淚t [general practice] is certainly a challenging space, but the minister is committed to making a difference.鈥

Michael Morrah is a senior investigative reporter/team leader at the Herald. He won the best coverage of a major news event at the 2024 Voyager NZ Media Awards and has twice been named reporter of the year. He has been a broadcast journalist for 20 years and joined the Herald鈥檚 video team in July 2024.

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