RNZCGPTuesday 23 February 2010, 9:56AM
The Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners welcomes
today's statement by Professor Des Gorman of Health Workforce New
Zealand that GPs need to be a key focus in future medical workforce
planning. Professor Gorman said: "If you ask me what group of the
senior doctors I am most anxious about it's actually the GPs.
That's where the utility sits and that's where if we are to have a
cost effective, sustainable and affordable health system we need to
put our emphasis."
College President, Dr Harry Pert says: "We share the concern of our
hospital specialist colleagues about medical workforce shortages
and support the call by the Association of Senior Medical
Specialists (ASMS) for a more strategic approach to medical
workforce planning. We look forward to working towards this with
the newly formed Health Workforce New Zealand and our colleagues
across the sector to increase the number of specialist trained
doctors in New Zealand."
"There is compelling national and international evidence to show
the benefits of strong primary care - countries that are able to
deliver high quality services at primary care level have healthier
citizens at lower cost to taxpayers and more equitable health
outcomes. It is vitally important that New Zealand trains and
retains more doctors with specialist training, including doctors
specialising in General Practice. The College's priority is to
ensure that New Zealand follows the evidence base by investing
appropriately in general practice training. This will ensure that
our equally important hospital specialist colleagues can focus on
the secondary services that they are best placed to provide,"
explains Dr Pert.
"Increased training places for general practitioners and
initiatives like the bonding scheme have been positive step, but
there is still a long way to go. Funding models need to be
addressed, because doctors undertaking specialist training in
general practice still fund a considerable proportion of their own
training, unlike their colleagues in other medical
specialties."