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Media Statement - Monday 4 May 2026

Twelve national organisations are calling for immediate reform to Medicare and pharmaceutical policy settings that are delaying diagnosis, fragmenting care and driving avoidable hospital admissions in the bush.
The peak bodies representing nurses, nurse practitioners, endorsed midwives, midwives, and midwifery services have written jointly to the Senate Standing Committees on Rural and Regional Affairs and Transport, warning that current settings are materially compromising timely access to essential health care across rural, regional and remote Australia.
The group is warning the consequences of recent policy changes are “no longer theoretical,” with services reporting disrupted care pathways, delayed reviews and increasing strain on already fragile models of care.
“Reform is not optional,” said Adjunct Professor Chris Helms, Chief Executive Officer of the Australian College of Nurse Practitioners. “Without urgent correction, current policy settings will continue to compromise safety, sustainability and equitable access for rural, regional and remote Australians.”
“These settings are no longer administrative inefficiencies – they are contributing to delayed diagnosis, fragmented care, avoidable hospital escalation and inequitable outcomes for high-risk populations,” said Adjunct Professor Helms, who signed the letter on behalf of the group.
The signatories highlight the 12-month face-to-face requirement for Nurse Practitioner Medicare Benefits Schedule telehealth services as a particular concern, noting that for many rural, regional and remote Australians, telehealth is not a convenience but the only clinically viable pathway to continuity of care.
Patients are experiencing delayed reviews, postponed investigations and fragmented follow-up solely due to funding restrictions. The group warns these impacts are especially serious in oncology surveillance and survivorship care, complex mental health follow-up, chronic disease management and palliative care.
In addition, nurse practitioner- and midwife-led practices remain ineligible for MyMedicare registration, excluded from Bulk Billing Incentive Programs, locked out of key advanced diagnostic and procedural MBS items, and without appropriate rebates for after-hours and on-call services.
“It is inconsistent to promote workforce expansion through the Commonwealth’s Nurse Practitioner Workforce Plan while structurally limiting the funding mechanisms that enable that workforce to practise sustainably,” the letter states.
The group also calls out the exclusion of Nurse Practitioners from the Repatriation Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (RPBS), which forces Department of Veterans’ Affairs patients to transfer to alternative prescribers solely to access subsidised medications – disrupting established therapeutic relationships for administrative reasons alone.
The signatories are calling for eight urgent reforms:
Signatories: Australian College of Nurse Practitioners • Australia and New Zealand Urological Nurses Society • Australian College of Mental Health Nurses •Australian College of Nursing • Australian Primary Health Care Nurses Association • Cancer Nurses Society of Australia • College of Emergency Nursing Australasia • Congress of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Nurses and Midwives • CRANAPlus • Drug and Alcohol Nurses Australasia • Gastroenterological Nurses College of Australia • Synapse Medical Services
Media contacts
Australian College of Nursing: Lexi Metherell
0449 803 524 | acn.media@acn.edu.au
Australian Primary Health Care Nurses Association: Tarek Dale
0421 848 145 | tarek.dale@apna.asn.au
Gastroenterological Nurses College of Australia: Melinda Dallas
1300 788 155 | admin@genca.org
About APNA
The Australian Primary Health Care Nurses Association (APNA) is the peak body and professional membership association for all nurses working outside of a hospital setting in Australia. APNA champions the role of primary health care nurses; to advance professional recognition, ensure workforce sustainability, nurture leadership in health, and optimise the role of nurses in patient-centred care.
APNA is bold, vibrant and future-focused. We reflect the views of our membership and the broader profession by bringing together nurses from across Australia to represent, advocate, promote and celebrate the achievements of nurses in primary health care.
APNA represents a significant and rapidly expanding workforce; primary health care nurses account for around one in eight of the 640,000 registered health professionals in Australia.
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