A 2022 survey has revealed that medical graduates have turned to other specialty areas, and only 15 per cent of medical graduates are interested in a career in general practice.
“Trainees who chose to leave the hospital system to enter GP training face a significant cut in salary and have inferior entitlements in areas such as parental leave, personal leave, and long service leave,” AMA President Professor Steve Robson said.
Both organisations representing the medical sector and future GPS hope tomorrow’s Federal Budget includes investment in Australia’s next generation of GPs.
“General Practices have always and will continue to play a critical foundation in training our next generation of GPs, but more support is urgently required,” GPRA President Dr Karyn Matterson said.
Despite growing needs in the community, the Australian General Practice Training Program has been undersubscribed since 2017.
The unfilled training places for practices and communities have become an ongoing problem, with 252 of the 1,500 first-year GP training places remaining empty in 2023.
“There is no time to wait, the future of General Practice is at a crossroads, and it is critical the government chooses the right path now,” Dr Matterson said.
Subscribe to The Briefing, Australia's fastest-growing news podcast on Listnr today. The Briefing serves up the latest news headlines and a deep dive into a topic affecting you. All in under 20 minutes.