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Supporting GPs caring for deprived patients

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Content provided by The Medical Republic. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Medical Republic or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

GPs who work with patients who are experiencing deprivation and poverty are intimately acquainted with the inverse care law -- the availability of good medical care tends to vary inversely with the need for it in the population served.

Dr Liz Sturgiss, a GP and senior research fellow at Monash University, the phenomenon all too well in her clinical work.

“To say that word -- poverty -- and focus on poverty is really uncomfortable,” she said.

“We are a wealthy country, but we're noticing more and more that gap between people who are living in poverty and those who aren't in our everyday work.

“As a GP, it's becoming apparent, that if you have money, the kind of care that I can organize for you is vastly different from my patients who are living on pensions and are unemployed. It gets really uncomfortable.”

Dr Sturgiss has teamed up with fellow GP Dr Tim Senior to start a new RACGP specific interest group on deprivation and poverty, to provide peer-to-peer support for GPs caring for socioeconomically disadvantaged patients.

In an opinion piece for TMR, Dr Senior wrote:

“The health of our patients and the ability of our practices to respond to this is profoundly dependent on the circumstances in which people live, and these circumstances are profoundly dependent on people having sufficient money.

“The GPs working in these areas have specific skills in patient engagement and empowerment, in managing multimorbidity and complexity and in advocating across multiple agencies for their patients. They exhibit the pragmatism that gets results among people the rest of the health system views as being ‘hard to reach’.”

In this episode of the Tea Room Dr Senior and Dr Sturgiss talk about why they felt a SIG on deprivation and poverty was needed, what support GPs will be offered, and venture into the murky waters of “team care”.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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150 episodes

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Manage episode 355419452 series 3380145
Content provided by The Medical Republic. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Medical Republic or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

GPs who work with patients who are experiencing deprivation and poverty are intimately acquainted with the inverse care law -- the availability of good medical care tends to vary inversely with the need for it in the population served.

Dr Liz Sturgiss, a GP and senior research fellow at Monash University, the phenomenon all too well in her clinical work.

“To say that word -- poverty -- and focus on poverty is really uncomfortable,” she said.

“We are a wealthy country, but we're noticing more and more that gap between people who are living in poverty and those who aren't in our everyday work.

“As a GP, it's becoming apparent, that if you have money, the kind of care that I can organize for you is vastly different from my patients who are living on pensions and are unemployed. It gets really uncomfortable.”

Dr Sturgiss has teamed up with fellow GP Dr Tim Senior to start a new RACGP specific interest group on deprivation and poverty, to provide peer-to-peer support for GPs caring for socioeconomically disadvantaged patients.

In an opinion piece for TMR, Dr Senior wrote:

“The health of our patients and the ability of our practices to respond to this is profoundly dependent on the circumstances in which people live, and these circumstances are profoundly dependent on people having sufficient money.

“The GPs working in these areas have specific skills in patient engagement and empowerment, in managing multimorbidity and complexity and in advocating across multiple agencies for their patients. They exhibit the pragmatism that gets results among people the rest of the health system views as being ‘hard to reach’.”

In this episode of the Tea Room Dr Senior and Dr Sturgiss talk about why they felt a SIG on deprivation and poverty was needed, what support GPs will be offered, and venture into the murky waters of “team care”.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  continue reading

150 episodes

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