Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care

New RACGP Red Book gives GPs actionable advice on more preventive health topics

Royal Australian College of GPs 3 mins read

The Royal Australian College of GPs (RACGP) has launched the 10th edition of its “Red Book”, the Guidelines for preventive activities in general practice for GPs.   

The new edition of the widely used resource builds on its long history of guiding preventive activities in general practice. The 10th edition includes recommendations on evidence-based screening, prevention of chronic disease, early detection of disease, and empowering patients through health education and promotion.

Changes to the Red Book in the 10th edition include:

  • New topics, including developmental delay and autism; child and elder abuse; anxiety; gambling; sleep; eating disorders; several new women’s health topics in relation to preventive care during and after pregnancy; and post menopause.
  • Adoption of the internationally recognised GRADE framework to ensure recommendations are written to be actionable and use of this gold standard for grading recommendation strength and direction.
  • A standardised topic format and word limit to ensure recommendations are concise and uniform.

General practice plays a pivotal role in preventive care, with 85% of the Australian population consulting a GP at least once a year. Preventive care can also, when delivered more systematically, help address health disparities, particularly benefiting disadvantaged and vulnerable population groups.

RACGP Red Book Chair and Head of the Department of General Practice at Monash University Professor Danielle Mazza AM said a new more rigorous approach was used in the development of the new edition and the format redesigned to make information more accessible.

“The Red Book is the key resource for preventive healthcare in general practice,” Professor Mazza said.

“In developing this new edition, we have used a clearer more consistent format so GPs can quickly access and review best practice advice on a wider range of conditions.

“I’m really proud of the work the teams of expert GPs have done for this edition. This includes adopting GRADE, a new recommendation system in line with other guidelines around the world, and rigorously reviewing all topics to ensure they’re consistent, concise, evidence based and implementable was an enormous project. The result is a Red Book that’s easier to rapidly review and apply in practice. Feedback has been very positive, with GPs loving the online searchable format.

“The new topics we have introduced in this edition also reflect the changing landscape of general practice and our patients. Mental health presentations were recorded as the most common issue in general practices in the RACGP Health of the Nation report for the sixth consecutive year, with 38% of consultations including a mental health component. In 2020-22, 1.9 million people sought professional help for mental health, and GPs were the most common health professional they sought out.

“Alongside new topics in mental health, cancer, and more, we have also greatly expanded the preventive health topics in women’s health. GPs are a patient’s key provider at all stages of a woman’s life, so new guidance on preconception care, the first antenatal visit, throughout pregnancy, health between pregnancies, and postnatal mental health will be key resources for GPs. Menopause has been an area where women have historically been underserved in the health system, so guidance on preventive health around post menopause will be welcome.”

The Red Book provides Australia’s 39,000 GPs with guidelines based on extensive consultations and reviews of clinical research.

The RACGP has called for funding to create living guidelines for GPs so patient care is consistently updated from the latest evidence as it is published. RACGP President Dr Nicole Higgins said this would help GPs to stay at the forefront of medical best practice.

“Health research and evidence change rapidly,” Dr Higgins said.

“GPs see hundreds or thousands of patients a year, so a delay between quality research being published and being reviewed and incorporated into guidelines means missed opportunities. The volume and breadth of medical research publishing means an update requires significant work by experts, with appropriate resourcing and support.

“Getting that support in place for the RACGP will pay dividends in not just better health and quality of life, but in disease prevention and management in the community.

“The leading causes of death and disability in Australia are preventable or can be delayed with early intervention. Funding for RACGP guidelines and for preventive interventions in general practice will mean Australians get the latest evidence-based care – this will make Australia healthier and reduce costs to the health system.”

~ENDS


About us:

The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) is the peak representative organisation for general practice, the backbone of Australia’s health system. We set the standards for general practice, facilitate lifelong learning for GPs, connect the general practice community, and advocate for better health and wellbeing for all Australians.

Visit www.racgp.org.au. To unsubscribe from RACGP media releases, click here.


Contact details:

John Ronan
Media Adviser

Ally Francis
Media Adviser

Stuart Winthrope
Media Officer

Contact: 03 8699 0992[email protected]

Follow us on Twitter: @RACGP and Facebook.

Media

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care, Research Development
  • 11/07/2025
  • 16:28
The Florey

Harnessing mRNA to prevent and slow Alzheimer’s disease

mRNA Victoria funds 2Floreyprojects to prevent and treat Alzheimer’s disease Key points mRNA Victoria has funded 2 Alzheimer’s disease research projects that could position Victoria as a leader in the development of mRNA-based therapies. Dr Abdel Belaidi will develop an mRNA-based system that crosses the blood-brain barrier and aims to slow or even halt disease progression. Dr Rebecca Nisbet will develop an mRNA vaccine that aims to prevent Alzheimer’s disease from developing. Florey researchers working at the cutting edge of dementia research have received funding from mRNA Victoria to develop treatments and a vaccine for Alzheimer’s disease. Since mRNA vaccines…

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 11/07/2025
  • 07:05
Royal Australian College of GPs

GPs urge Tasmanian families to get vaccinated against whooping cough and call for free shots to reduce barriers

The Royal Australian College of GPs (RACGP) is urging Tasmanian families to get vaccinated against pertussis, or ‘whooping cough’ and called on all parties and candidates running in the state election to commit to making the vaccination free for all patients. From 1 January 2024 to April 2025, 1238 whooping cough cases were notified in Tasmania, including 10 infants aged under six months. Most hospitalisations and deaths occur in this group, who are not old enough to have received all vaccine doses. More than 21,000 infections were recorded nationwide last year, compared to just 2450 in 2023, and the National…

  • Contains:
  • General News, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 11/07/2025
  • 07:00
La Trobe University

La Trobe researchers awarded $4.5 million in ARC Future Fellowships

LaTrobe University researchers have secured almost $4.5 million in Federal Government funding to further studies into areas such as immune cell development, Australian history and agriculture. Four researchers received an Australian Research Council (ARC) Future Fellowship 2025. The prestigious Future Fellowships support high quality research in areas of national and international benefit, including in national research priorities. Dr Lisa Mielke, from the School of Cancer Medicine, the La Trobe Institute of Molecular Science (LIMS) and the Olivia Newton-John Cancer Research Institute (ONJCRI), received $1.13 million to identify new molecules for future drug and vaccine development to improve gut health in…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.