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General Practitioner Services

Dáil Éireann Debate, Tuesday - 8 March 2022

Tuesday, 8 March 2022

Questions (637)

David Cullinane

Question:

637. Deputy David Cullinane asked the Minister for Health the timeline for the full roll-out of universal and free general practitioner care; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [12844/22]

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Written answers

As per the Programme for Government, the Government is committed to increasing access to GP care without charges for more children, an important healthcare measure that will remove a potentially prohibitive cost barrier to accessing GP care and will help to improve children’s health as they develop.

Budget 2022 provides for the initial stage of this phased expansion, the provision of GP care without fees to all children aged 6 and 7 and my Department and the HSE are working to roll the service out.

The Sláintecare vision for universal access to healthcare at low or no cost recognises the need for careful planning, as expanding eligibility could generate significant increases in demand for GP and other primary care services. Eligibility is to be expanded on a phased basis in line with GP capacity so as not limit the ability of general practice to meet the needs of all patients in the community. As such there is currently no timeline for universal GP care without charges.

Measures taken by the Government to increase GP capacity and the number of GPs in the State are already having an impact. There has been a significant increase in the number of GPs entering training in recent years, up from 120 in 2009 to 233 in 2021, with large increases made in recent years. The transfer of responsibility for training to the ICGP, completed last year, will result in further increases in the coming years. 259 GP training places are planned for 2022.

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