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Measuring and Growing Inherent Capacity in General Practice Dr Jan Radford Dr Lizzi Shires Dr Emma Warnecke Mrs Michelle Horder.

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Presentation on theme: "Measuring and Growing Inherent Capacity in General Practice Dr Jan Radford Dr Lizzi Shires Dr Emma Warnecke Mrs Michelle Horder."— Presentation transcript:

1 Measuring and Growing Inherent Capacity in General Practice Dr Jan Radford Dr Lizzi Shires Dr Emma Warnecke Mrs Michelle Horder

2 What is GP MAGIC? GP MAGIC was established as a first step towards a Tasmania wide effort to systematically measure and grow the capacity of Tasmania general practice to train GPs and other medical learners along the vertical continuum.

3 Why do we need GP MAGIC?  Tasmania has an ageing GP population  Tasmania’s patient population is ageing faster than the rest of Australia  Increased intake of medical students requiring placements  To collect data to inform policy  To encourage students to consider General Practice as a career

4 What have we done so far?  Literature Review  Surveyed all Tasmanian General Practitioners  Undertaken focus group interviews with General Practitioners  Initial analysis of survey results

5 Snapshot of Survey Responses  Survey sent to 570 General Practitioners in Tasmania  377 (66%) General Practitioners completed the survey  Of the 377 responses 262 (70%) consented to follow up  Focus groups to date have been undertaken with 51 GPs representing 15 general practices in Northern Tasmania

6 Snapshot of Survey Results  The majority of GPs are interested in having PGPPP Junior Doctors or GP Registrars in their practice  91% of the 377 respondents saw teaching and supervision as their professional duty  83% of respondents hoped to inspire learners to consider General Practice as a career

7 Snapshot of Survey Results…(cont)  71% of respondents did not see the financial benefits to teaching as an incentive  34% of respondents were interested in increasing their skills in teaching and supervision

8 Snapshot of Focus Group Interviews  The majority of practices would like to take extra learners but require additional infrastructure before this is possible  The current workforce shortage is preventing many practices from taking on additional learners  Practices who have been involved with the PGPPP or Registrar program would like a continual flow of these learners  Almost every practice had at least one practitioner who was interested in reducing their patient load to undertake a key role supervising learners if the remuneration was adequate

9 Snapshot of Focus Group Interviews (cont)  Most General Practitioners teach because of a “love of the profession” not for monetary gain  General Practitioners recognise the need for learners to have their own room to see patients  General Practitioners unanimously agreed they would like a “one stop shop” accreditation process

10 Where to from here?  Undertake focus group interviews throughout the remainder of Tasmania  Expand the project to include nursing learners within the General Practice setting  Develop and implement training programs for General Practitioners interested in improving their teaching and supervision skills  Work with other accreditation bodies to develop a “one stop shop” accreditation process across all levels of learners

11 Where to from here?  Continue to support General Practices with assistance and advice on infrastructure grants  Prepare submissions to the Federal Government to support the need for additional funding in General Practice

12 Discussion Any questions?


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