1 / 19

Rural & Remote Medicine: a Specialty

Rural & Remote Medicine: a Specialty. Professor Ian Wronski Immediate Past-President ACRRM Executive Dean, Faculty of Medicine, Health and Molecular Sciences, JCU. The Rural and Remote Medical Workforce. 4000 rural and remote doctors Middle aged workforce 70% male 30% Female.

manny
Télécharger la présentation

Rural & Remote Medicine: a Specialty

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Rural & Remote Medicine:a Specialty Professor Ian Wronski Immediate Past-President ACRRM Executive Dean, Faculty of Medicine, Health and Molecular Sciences, JCU

  2. The Rural and Remote Medical Workforce • 4000 rural and remote doctors • Middle aged workforce • 70% male • 30% Female Source ARRWAG, 2004

  3. Practice Style • Private office practice 80% ¾ Owners/partners ¼ salaried by the practice½ involved in hospital care especially A&E • Registrar 9% ½ salaried • Hospital only 5% • Community team 3% • Locum < 1% • Fly in Fly out 1% • Other 1% Source Reality Bites ARRWAG

  4. Workforce Source ARRWAG, 2004

  5. Procedural activity Source RDAA Viable Models report

  6. Workforce Shortages • Workforce shortages in all health professions • Particularly in rural and remote practice • Shortages exacerbated by international competition for health professionals • Difficulties in attracting and retaining health staff to regional areas

  7. Current Government Initiatives • Educational Programs • Students • RAMUS • Medical school intakes • NRHN • JFSS • RCS/UDRH • RMBS(100 pa) +234 • Interns • RRAPP • Registrars • GPET Regionalised RTP • ERT Framework • Rural Doctors • Procedural medicine

  8. What do we know about going Rural? - the Evidence • Rural origin 2.5X (1.68 to 3.9) • Rural schooling 2.5X (2.2 to 5.42) • Rural spouse 3.5X • Rural undergraduate 2.05X (0.7 to 3.0) plus anecdotal - seem to want to stay on • Rural Intern 3X(Peach et al, Ballarat 2004) • Rural Training 2.5X(Rural Stocktake, Jack Best) • Rural upskilling/support - Stay longer (Hays et al, Wilkinson et al)`

  9. The Argument for Rural and Remote Medicine as a Specialty • Meets three core criteria for recognition as a specialty

  10. 1. Improve Safety of Health Care • By ensuring dedicated education and training targeted at the realities of rural and remote practice • Provide appropriately benchmarked guidelines for managing clinical risk in rural practice • Foster further growth in research into safe clinical care

  11. 2. Improve the Standards of Health Care • Provide an adequately trained workforce • Increase understanding and focus on service needs of rural communities • New models of care and complementary training, accreditation and professional support structures • Consolidate acceptance of rural standards by professional organisations responsible for safety (e.g. clinical privileges) • Provide support and clear points of articulation for entry and exit to other specialties (e.g. general practice into RRM) • Assist other specialties to deliver appropriate support and education to their rural and remote colleagues • Advance more effective medical service models within resource and distance constraints

  12. 3. Result in More Cost Effective Health Care • Create most effective rural medical workforce service models • Reduce costs of unnecessary retrieval, referral and transportation for patients • Facilitate resource and administrative sharing amongst training programs and allow for streamlining of training time and arrangements • Create clear and facilitated career paths and continuity of education from undergraduate to postgraduate practice – organisational and professional efficiencies • Assist to recruit doctors by improving status and attractiveness of rural career • Provide impetus for continued growth of intellectual and service infrastructure in rural areas

  13. Community Benefits • Better rural doctor recruitment, retention and support • Better targeted training for medical services that rural communities want and need • Opportunity to nurture better inter-specialty teamwork models • Sustaining rural communities themselves by maintaining and retaining rural doctors • More medical services available at home communities

  14. Benefits of specialisation • Identity and recognition (retention) • Specialist Rebates (complexity) • Infrastructure support • G/S • Access to MRI referral etc • More Rural Doctors (recruitment) • Career pathways for rural students • Mentoring and teaching next generation of rural doctors • Opens up alternative pathways to doctors interested in rural medicine, but not attracted to standard GP training

  15. What’s missing? • Recognition  some recent developments • VR (Partway with PDP) • Specialist (AMC process under way) • Rural Training Pathway enabled and integrated (Part way with GPET enhanced rural training framework)

  16. ACRRM • ACRRM • 1700 members • FACRRM – 1330 (generalists) • Advocacy • PDP - unified • For VR • Procedural • Radiology • Education - Filling the gaps • Telederm, Ultrasound, Anaesthetics, Surgery, Obstetrics • Population health (Collaboratives) • RRMEO

  17. The Future – what it could it look like • A different educational pathway with flexibility and rural focus • The same infrastructure • Targeted selection to a different cohort • Targeted incentives to learn not just be there

  18. Future • Recognition and specialisation • Simpler pathway to RRM - choice • Further development/refinement of standards • Further development of assessment incl exam • Educational gaps addressed e.g. procedural • Increasing rural infrastructure incl Regional Training Providers, Rural Clinical Schools University departments of Rural Health and rural teaching practices • CPMC and College collaboration

  19. Future workforce • Important determinant of other factors Workforce Lifestyle Family • Ground work done and infrastructure in place • Wave of students coming • Attract and keep • Nourish and keep them up to date • RECOGNISE and REWARD

More Related