Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care

GPs welcome announcement to boost to ADHD care in Tasmania

Royal Australian College of GPs 3 mins read

The Royal Australian College of GPs (RACGP) has welcomed a Tasmanian Liberals announcement make it easier for patients to access care for ADHD and called on all parties and candidates in the July state election reform ADHD care.

If re-elected, Premier Jeremy Rockliff said Tasmanian GPs trained in ADHD would be able to provide assessments and diagnoses and initiate medication for children and adults.

This would make access to ADHD treatment faster, cheaper, and in many cases, via their usual GP, allowing patients living with ADHD to receive whole-of-person care from a GP who knows them and their history.

The Tasmanian Liberals will also allow patients to access ADHD medication prescribed in other states in Tasmania by the end of the year. This would break a significant barrier for patients diagnosed or managed by in other states.

ADHD is within the scope of general practice. It is in the curriculum for RACGP GP training, with  ADHD modules also in the gplearning platform. Queensland GPs diagnosed ADHD and prescribed for patients aged 4–18 since 2017.

This week, the RACGP called for Tasmania to recognise GPs can provide this care following announcements GPs will be able to diagnose and prescribe for ADHD in Western Australia, New South Wales, the ACT, South Australia.

RACGP Tasmania Chair Dr Toby Gardner welcomed the Tasmanian Liberals’ announcement and called on all parties and candidates to commit to reforms so specialist GPs can provide holistic care for patients with ADHD.

“Too many Tasmanians have been missing out on care because of challenges accessing a psychiatrist or paediatrician for a condition GPs are trained to manage, and have been diagnosing and managing for years on the mainland,” he said.

“An ADHD assessment and diagnosis can cost thousands of dollars after months of waiting. The result is that patients in more rural and lower socioeconomic status areas miss out on care.

“Early intervention for children with ADHD sets children up for success at school and throughout their lives. For adults, a diagnosis and access to treatment by a GP who knows you can be lifechanging.

“This is an excellent move to break barriers to care from the Tasmanian Liberals.

“All parties and candidates should back ADHD reform. This is about setting Tasmanians up for success and our health system will benefit from reforms that allow specialist GPs to provide easier, safe access to ADHD care.”

ADHD is estimated to affect 6–10% of children and young people and 2–10% of adults.

RACGP Specific Interests Child and Young Person’s Health Chair Dr Tim Jones, who presented to Tasmania’s Inquiry into the assessment and treatment of ADHD last year, said ADHD care in Tasmania is in dire need of an overhaul.

“As I’ve said before, our current system serves no one," he said.

“We see our patients, children and adults, struggle as they wait for care. It’s not timely, it’s not affordable, it’s unfair for rural patients and those who can’t afford to access care in the private system.

“Meanwhile, our medicine regulations block access for patients who’ve received care interstate. If a Tasmanian patient has received a diagnosis interstate, or a patient living with ADHD moves here, they need to plan well ahead to access local non-GP specialist care or fly interstate to access medication they take every day.

“As specialist GPs, we can be the solution.”

He said specialist GPs are well-placed to provide holistic, lifelong care that supports patients living with ADHD to thrive throughout their lives.

“Patients living with ADHD really benefit from the kind of ‘whole of person’ care GPs provide,” Dr Jones said.

“Specialist GPs provide holistic lifelong care. With management of their ADHD, patients can thrive across all stages of their lives, from early childhood to school, in further education or training, throughout their careers and family formation.

“Being able to access ADHD medication is transformative for most patients. But it’s not the only solution, and it’s rarely the sole solution.

“GPs can help patients with ADHD achieve good sleep and balance, them and their families understand and manage their behaviour, address stress, and reach their potential at school and at work. We can refer patients to services where they need more support to manage and any co-occurring conditions.

“That’s what the role of specialist GPs can and should be in ADHD, the first and in most cases, primary carer who can apply their training and clinical judgement to provide holistic care for our patients.”

~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
Senior Media Adviser

Stuart Winthrope
Media Adviser

Contact: 03 8699 0992[email protected]

Follow us on X and Facebook.

Media

More from this category

  • Insurance, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 19/07/2025
  • 05:00
Medibank

Virtual cardiac rehab program reduces hospital readmission days by over 70%

Medibank’s Heart Health at Home a game-changer in cardiovascular care A study published in the European Heart Journal- Digital Health has hailed Medibank’s virtual cardiac rehabilitation program, Heart Health at Home, as a leap forward in modern healthcare, showing it is associated with a noticeable reduction in hospital readmission days for cardiac patients. The evaluation, conducted by the Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute, examined 176 Medibank customers enrolled in the Heart Health at Home program. Participants recorded a 71% reduction in hospital readmission days within a 3-month period. With approximately 1.3 million Australians currently living with vascular disease and cardiovascular…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 18/07/2025
  • 16:10
Australian Private Hospitals Association

Media release: Why bundled payments fail maternity patients

Media Release 18 July 2025 Why bundled payments fail maternity patients BUNDLED payments are the slippery slope towards US-style managed care. Health insurers pre-determining what they will pay for regardless of the clinical needs of patients is not a “comprehensive care package” as claimed. In fact, it is the opposite, dictating care to specialists based on costs and leaving the most vulnerable patients at highest risk. It can offer potential benefits for cost management, but the impact depends heavily on how it is implemented. When done in genuine close consultation with hospital treatment teams, bundling can promote coordinated, efficient care…

  • Contains:
  • Food Beverages, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 18/07/2025
  • 13:35
Doctors For Nutrition

Free Dietary Assessment Tool Unveiled to Support Healthier Eating

Doctors For Nutrition is proud to announce the launch of our newly revised, user-friendly online dietary assessment tool—the 4Leaf Survey*! This innovative resource is…

  • Contains:

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.