Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care

Research consortium will strengthen evidence to improve care for patients across Australia

Royal Australian College of GPs 2 mins read

The Royal Australian College of GPs says a new national multidisciplinary consortium for primary care research is a positive step forward to improve patient care. 

The RACGP is a member of the National Multidisciplinary Primary Care Research, Policy and Advocacy Consortium, which involves 100 primary care researchers from 20 universities from across the country.  

RACGP President Dr Michael Wright said: “Every year more than 22 million Australians see a specialist GP for their essential health care, making general practice is the most accessed part of our health system.  

“Yet research in general practice is vastly underrepresented and underfunded. General practice receives less than 2% of our national medical research funding. 

“We need to fix this. Health research should happen where most people access healthcare – and that’s in general practice. 

“This new consortium is an important and exciting opportunity to design, test and innovate models of care to better meet the needs of patients across Australia, and I’m proud the RACGP is a member. 

“There is more we need to do to support general practice research in Australia. 

“The RACGP is calling for all political parties to commit to funding a national practice-based research network, like they have in Canada and the United Kingdom.  

“These networks have proven to be immensely valuable overseas. The Canadian network produces evidence that improves patient care for a range of the country’s major health issues, including chronic illness, ageing, and addiction. 

“We’re also calling for funding to test how multidisciplinary practice teams work at full scope in Australia, in order to improve access to care for patients. 

“Most practices in Australia provide multidisciplinary care, with specialist GPs, practice nurses, and allied health professionals working together for patients.  

“We know people get the best outcomes when their GP works together with their other specialists, and health professionals, and it’s especially valuable for people with chronic and complex illnesses. 

“If these initiatives are funded, it will not only improve access to care, and health service delivery, it will result in healthier patients and communities, save health care costs, and reduce pressure on hospitals and emergency departments.” 

~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.

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 12/03/2026
  • 10:01
Monash University

Monash Researchers Awarded up to $22.4 Million AUD to Develop New Medicines for Restoring Lymphatic Pumping

Monash University is partnering with the University of Missouri and the University of Pennsylvania to develop first-in-class medicines designed to reverse poor lymphatic vessel contraction and transport function, backed by an up to $22.4 million AUD Award from the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H). The researchers join ARPA-H’s GLIDE (Groundbreaking Lymphatic Interventions and Drug Exploration) program to transform how both primary lymphatic diseases and common chronic diseases are treated by developing innovative therapeutics that alleviate, repair or regenerate a dysfunctional lymphatic vascular system. Professor Arthur Christopoulos, Dean of the Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, said the work…

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 12/03/2026
  • 09:53
Royal Australian College of GPs

RACGP urges Tasmanian government to prioritise aged-care safety in budget

The Royal Australian College ofGPs (RACGP) is calling on the Tasmanian Government to put patient safety firstandredirect$5 millionfromaproposed pharmacy scope-of-practice expansion pilot into embedding pharmacists directly inside residential aged care facilities (RACFs). The initiative can be fully funded through reprioritisation, delivering better outcomes at noadditionalcost to the state budget. In its 2026–27 Pre-Budget Submission, the RACGP warns that the current retail-based pharmacy prescribing pilot model risks fragmenting care, duplicating services, and diverting scarce funding away from areas of genuine clinical need, particularly the state’s ageing population. RACGP Tasmania Chair Dr Toby Gardner said Tasmania had an opportunity to lead the…

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 12/03/2026
  • 06:05
Royal Australian College of GPs

RACGP hails changes to deliver fairer rural workforce incentives

The Royal Australian College of GPs (RACGP) has welcomedimportant changesto the Workforce Incentive Program (WIP) – Rural Advanced Skills stream, following strong advocacy on behalf of rural and remote GPs. These reforms will remove unintended barriers that previously prevented many doctors from accessing incentive payments, particularly GPs delivering critical primary care and advanced skills services in rural and remote communities while also working parttime in metropolitan settings. RACGP Rural ChairAssociate ProfessorMichael Clements said the change is a significant win for rural general practice and better reflects the realities of how GPs work across Australia’s health system. “This is a positive…

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.