Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care

Victorian GPs: Budget investment in hospitals will secure care, but opportunities to boost healthcare access remain

Royal Australian College of GPs 3 mins read

The Royal Australian College of GPs (RACGP) has welcomed the Victorian Government’s significant investment in hospitals, but warned Victorians’ access to quality care is far from guaranteed.

While the College said an extra $9.3 billion will boost care by opening new facilities and preventing hospital budgets from falling into deficit, it reiterated concerns that by deferring to lobbyists on pharmacy prescribing, the government is pursuing an approach that breaks continuity of care and increases risks to patients.

The RACGP also urged the government to monitor access to GPs and consider investments to ensure communities can access care.

RACGP Victoria chair Dr Anita Muñoz said the investment will help secure access to care and reiterated the importance of a well-connected health system but reiterated the essential role of general practice in an efficient health system.

“As GPs, we need to know that when we refer a patient to a hospital for non-GP specialist care, they’ll get it,” she said.

“Specialist GPs keep hospital costs down by providing preventive care so patients can stay healthy in the community. Supporting GPs to provide acute and chronic disease care to their full scope is the best way to prevent hospital cost blowouts. This investment will however help reassure GPs and our patients their access to care is secured.

“Investments in hospital systems are also an opportunity to ensure they are communicating well with patients’ GPs. Research has also shown visiting a GP soon after an unplanned admission can reduce readmissions by up to 32%.

As the Victorian coroner has stressed, ensuring GPs promptly receive discharge summaries with all relevant information when one of their patients leaves a hospital saves lives, particularly on medicines they have been prescribed.

“Health systems need clear lines of communication. It’s a matter of safety. That also makes today’s announcement pharmacy prescribing powers would be expanded troubling, as this too often fragments healthcare by breaking those lines of communication.”

Dr Muñoz also noted the Victorian GP training incentives program, which she called ‘a lesson for other states’, will not continue despite strong and measurable improvements to rural, regional, and urban communities’ access to care.

“While the federal funding will continue what Victoria started, it’s unfortunate Victorian funding has ceased given how well the program was working to bring GPs to the communities which needed them most,” she said.

“Three fifths of the junior doctors who received an incentive trained in regional or rural Victoria, one in eight recipients moved here in response, and almost half said they wouldn’t have chosen to train as a GP at all without this funding.

“While the returned Albanese Government’s commitment to invest in similar incentives to ensure doctors who train as GPs are not worse off than their hospital-based peers will back up the Victorian Government’s pioneering investment over 2023 and 2024, the program showed investments in general practice deliver value for money with real effects.

“If a town doesn’t have a GP close by, older people leave and young families are understandably reluctant to move there. Previous modelling by the federal health department showed we could face a shortage of 2000 GPs in Victoria by 2033.

“The success we and the Victorian Government delivered by boosting the GP training pipeline has likely reduced that risk, but there will always be local challenges, especially outside our cities. The government should consider opportunities to build on the lessons learned and support communities which need assistance attracting GPs.”


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
Senior Media Adviser

Stuart Winthrope
Media Adviser

Contact: 03 8699 0992[email protected]

Follow us on X and Facebook.

Media

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 16/12/2025
  • 00:11
Novotech

Novotech Issues White Paper to Help Sponsors Strengthen Early-Phase Oncology Strategy and Execution

SYDNEY–BUSINESS WIRE– Novotech, a leading global full-service clinical research organization (CRO) and scientific advisory company, has released a new white paper, Early-Phase Oncology –…

  • Contains:
  • Government NSW, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 15/12/2025
  • 20:27
ASMOF NSW

Message of condolence to the community and thank you to our frontline health workers and first responders

The Doctors Union is deeply saddened by the tragic events at Bondi Beach. Our thoughts remain with the victims, their families, and the Jewish community who have been targeted in this tragic attack. We send our strength and solidarity to all those who are grieving. We extend our deepest thanks to the police, lifeguards, lifesavers, doctors, nurses, paramedics, and every worker in NSW who has responded to the terror attack at Bondi. With victims being cared for across nine hospitals in NSW, we know that our members are facing an incredibly distressing and confronting situation.   Your commitment to your patients, your colleagues, and…

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 15/12/2025
  • 15:11
Byron Medical Pty Ltd

Byron Medical Announces the Product Release of BlancOne: a Science-Powered Breakthrough Redefining In-Chair Whitening Technology

BRISBANE, Australia, Dec. 15, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Byron Medical is excited to announce their exclusive distribution of BlancOne, a system developed with cutting-edge photochemistry and biophotonics that is rewriting the rules of professional whitening. Gone are the 60-minute sessions, uncomfortable gingival barriers, and days of post-op sensitivity. Instead, patients achieve noticeably whiter smiles - up to 5 VITA shades brighter - after a single 10-minute treatment, with no pain and no sensitivity.Science That Shines: The Power of Photons Over Peroxide Traditional whitening relies heavily on high concentrations of hydrogen peroxide - often causing enamel dehydration and post-treatment sensitivity 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.