NAMDS MDS Definition
Preamble:
An organisation will be deemed to meet this Definition of a Medical Deputising Service if it is
accredited to the current Royal Australian College of General Practitioners Standards for
General Practice, including supplementary materials for after hours care services (as determined by
the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners from time to time) AND is accredited to
confirm it meets all the additional criteria set out below.
Definition
- A Practice Principal is a registered medical practitioner (vocationally recognised or
not, full-time or part-time), who undertakes the continuing care of patients in a
medical practice. The Practice Principal has a responsibility to arrange
comprehensive care of patients 24 hours a day and engages the MDS. - A Medical Deputising Service is an organization which directly arranges for medical
practitioners to provide after hours medical services to patients of Practice Principals
during the absence of, and at the request of, the Practice Principals. - A Medical Deputising Service is a means whereby a Practice Principal may
externally contract the after hours components of both continuous access to care
and continuity of care to practice patients - A Medical Deputising Service utilises facilities and processes which ensure
continuous access to care and continuity of patient care. - A Medical Deputising Service comprises a physical facility which incorporates a
control / communications / operations capacity, administrative services and, where
applicable, a clinic. - A Medical Deputising Service must provide home visits and may also provide clinic
and telephone triage / medical advice services. Medical Deputising Services must
ensure that they are always in a position to provide home visits as required for
significant medical reasons or as requested by Practice Principals, throughout the
entire after hours period. - A Medical Deputising Service responds to patient or principal-initiated calls only and
must not provide planned or routine patient services unless agreed with the patient’s
principal practitioner. - A Medical Deputising Service must not schedule appointments beyond the after
hours period in which the patient request was received. - A Medical Deputising Service is required to operate and provide uninterrupted
access to care, including home visits, for the whole of the after hours period. The
defined after hours periods that must be covered by the Medical Deputising Service
are: any time outside 8am - 6pm on weekdays and all day weekends and public holidays. A Medical Deputising Service must demonstrate that consultations and visits are provided during the unsociable hours from 11pm till 7am. - In providing complementary care on behalf of local, daytime general practice, a
Medical Deputising Service must be independent of any individual or group of
general practice(s). Medical Deputising Service premises must not be co-located
with a general practice. - As Medical Deputising Services do not offer comprehensive GP care, direct
advertising to encourage patients to use Medical Deputising Services for ‘routine’ or
convenience purposes, thereby compromising their access to the full range of GP
services, is prohibited. - A Medical Deputising Service must have a control / communications / operations
capacity which must be operational within its premises during the majority of the
defined after hours period. - A Medical Deputising Service which contracts out part of its control /
communications / operations function may only do so to an MDS accredited control
/ communications / operations service. - The control / communications / operations room must, during the after hours period,
be staffed by personnel appropriately trained in telephone triage, to guarantee
maintenance of accreditation standards and ensure the appropriate management of
urgent cases. - A Medical Deputising Service must have telephones attended 24 hours per day by
trained staff so the Principals can access the service to communicate special
patient information and facilitate continuity of care at all times.
Synopsis:
To confirm the organisations' status as an MDS in accordance with this definition
the MDS must complete the statutory declaration relevant to the state or territory in which
it practices as shown in appendix A.
This statutory declaration together with the accreditation certificate (that the MDS meets
the RACGP standards for General Practice, including supplementary materials for after hours care services) forms the evidentiary basis of meeting this definition.