LOCAL MEDICAL CENTRE CLOSES
Dr JENSEN (Tangney) (4:00 PM) —Just two weeks ago, a major doctors
surgery in my electorate abruptly closed its doors after giving its 4½
thousand patients only a few days notice. Only a short distance away is
another major clinic which closed last year, again leaving thousands of
patients without access to their GPs. In both cases, the closures were
ordered by their corporate owners—major enterprises which have bought
up local surgeries across Australia. These closures have caused
immeasurable distress, particularly to older constituents who are not
able to travel to more distant clinics, which are increasingly turning
away new patients anyway because they are so overloaded.
The most recent to close its doors was the Murdoch Centre, which has
been providing for the local community for some 40 years, including a
major retirement complex for RAF veterans and their widows. The
corporate operator has told patients to travel to another clinic in a
different suburb or, alternatively, pay $22 for copies of their own
medical records so that they can go to another GP—pay for their own
records. The previous clinic to close was the Farrington Medical
Centre, whose doctors sought to continue operating privately but were
told they would be in breach of their contract if they did so.
In all, thousands of my constituents have lost access to their GPs in
just a few months and thousands more are unable to get appointments
with doctors in their areas. The system is simply not working. While I
accept these corporate health enterprises must satisfy their
shareholders, there are bigger issues at stake. It is simply
unacceptable that patients, some of whom have attended the same surgery
for more than 30 years and are now in their eighties, are told with
only a few days notice that they will no longer have access to their
doctors. It is simply unacceptable that people are being told that
their local surgeries are overloaded and that no new patients will be
accepted for the foreseeable future.
Medical centres are
commercial enterprises but they are also public services, and with that
comes an obligation to the community. It is bad enough that these
clinics are being closed and that those which remain are so overwhelmed
by demand that they are unable to meet community need. But to then
discover that doctors at the corporate practices are contractually
barred from setting up new surgeries in the same area for some years is
abhorrent. When will this government act? When will this government
care?