Featured
Insights That Matter for Australian Healthcare
Explore the latest blogs, CPD programs, and healthcare events designed for Australian GPs, specialists, and healthcare teams.
Blogs
Healthcare insights, trends, and clinical perspectives
referrals_hero_v2.png

Referrals are a core part of how healthcare works in Australia.

They connect general practice to specialist care, quietly, routinely, and often without much attention.

But if you stop and think about it for a moment, there’s a simple question that doesn’t always have a clear answer:

What actually happens after a referral is sent?

On paper, it’s straightforward. A GP identifies the need, sends the referral, and the patient moves forward.

In reality, it’s a bit messier than that.

A referral might be received and actioned straight away. Or it might sit in an inbox for a while. Sometimes it needs a follow-up. Occasionally, it never quite turns into an appointment at all.

And most of the time, no one really knows, or at least not until a patient calls back to check what’s going on.

If you’ve ever had to ring a specialist clinic just to confirm whether something was received, you’ll know how common such situations are.

In most cases, it’s not that the system fails. It’s that no one has full clarity or visibility of it end-to-end.

 

What this looks like in Practice

 

Before getting into what can be done to improve things, let's step back for a second to see what statistics say:

  • Around 40% of Australians see a specialist each year, usually through GP-led pathways
  • Close to 1 in 5 people delay or miss specialist care when they need it
  • Wait times can range from a few weeks to several months, depending on the service

The pattern becomes clearer when we look at this chart:



Ref: Patient Experiences, 2024-25 financial year | Australian Bureau of Statistics

As patients age, reliance on specialist care increases, thereby highlighting the importance of clear, well-functioning referral pathways between GPs and specialists.

But while this pathway becomes more critical over time, what happens between each step isn’t always visible.

So if you’re trying to increase referrals, what actually helps?

It’s easy to assume the answer is more outreach. More networking. More visibility with local clinics.

And yes, that plays a role.

But in practice, referrals tend to follow something much simpler.

If a GP knows a process works consistently, they're far more likely to come back to it.

So it’s worth looking at what actually makes these pathways work.

 

Where referral pathways usually break and how to fix them

In most cases, it’s not one big issue. It’s a series of small gaps that add up over time.

 

1. Make it easy to refer — genuinely easy

 

Most GPs aren’t comparing multiple specialists in detail.

They’re making decisions in the middle of a busy clinic, often between patients.

Even small inconsistencies like different forms, unclear instructions, or extra steps can make the process harder than it needs to be.

And friction, even small amounts, changes behaviour.

Clarity and consistency matter more than optimisation.

That’s usually enough to make you the default choice — especially when GPs know they can rely on the experience each time.

2. Let clinics know it’s been received

 

Silence is one of the biggest issues here.

Something is sent… and then nothing.

From the GP’s side, that creates uncertainty. Was it received? Is it being actioned?

Even a simple acknowledgement helps.

A small signal can prevent a lot of follow-up.

It also reassures clinics that there’s an active process on the other end — not just a one-way handoff.

 

3. Close the loop after the patient is seen

 

Once the patient has been seen, communication tends to drop off. This part is often overlooked. 

But for GPs, this stage is where clarity matters most. A short summary. A clear next step.

Referrals aren’t just transactional. They’re relational.

When GPs consistently hear back and feel included in the patient’s journey, trust builds over time, and that’s what drives repeat referrals.

 

4. Look at how things are handled once they arrive

 

Not all delays come from outside the system.

Sometimes the bottleneck is internal: requests sitting in inboxes, delays in triaging, or unclear responsibility for follow-up. None of these are major issues on their own. But together, they add friction that patients and referring clinics both feel, even if they can't quite name it.

 

A more consistent internal flow removes uncertainty.

And when things are easier to manage internally, the experience becomes more predictable for the clinics referring to it.

 

5. Make the process visible (& not just communicative)

 

Effective communication tells people what happened. Visibility shows them what's happening now.

Has the referral been received? Is it waiting to be reviewed? Has the patient been booked?

Without that, everything becomes just reactive. GPs follow up, patients call to check, and clinics spend time chasing rather than caring.

Visibility reduces chasing, duplication, and delays.

And when GPs don’t have to follow up or guess what’s happening, they’re much more likely to trust and 'reuse' the same pathway.

 

6. Don’t lose sight of the patient experience

The patient is at the centre of all these discussions.

Patients don't see whether a referral was received or triaged. They just feel the delay. That uncertainty shapes how patients view the specialist and the GP who referred them.

When the experience is smooth, trust builds across the entire pathway.

And often, that’s what keeps referrals consistent over time. Patients feel more confident. They're more likely to follow through, return, and recommend.

 

To sum up...

Referrals are a routine part of care, but what happens after they’re sent is what shapes the outcome.

When pathways are clearer, the process becomes easier to trust. And when engagement with GPs is consistent, that trust builds over time. Together, those two things make a noticeable difference. 

Not just in how smoothly patients move through care, but in how reliably referrals continue to flow.

Improving referrals often comes down to making the process clearer and staying connected with the GPs you work with.

At RxTro, we focus on helping providers establish more consistent referral pathways.


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

By RxTro
16/09/2025 11:32
Approved
Endometriosis-diagnosis-delays-fragmented-care.png (2).png

At 17, Maya thought severe period pain was something she had to put up with.

By 22, she had fainted at work during her cycle. By her mid-twenties, she had seen several GPs, tried different medications, and undergone multiple scans. Each appointment ruled out something serious, but the underlying problem remained unclear.

She was 27 by the time she was diagnosed with endometriosis — nearly ten years after her symptoms first appeared.

For many women, this is how the experience unfolds. The symptoms are there early, but the answers take time.

Endometriosis affects an estimated 1 in 7 Australian women by the age of 49, and it affects around 190 million women globally, according to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare and the World Health Organisation. Diagnosis still takes years, typically six to eight years in Australia, and often longer elsewhere.

Research indicates that up to 65% of women with endometriosis initially receive an incorrect diagnosis, making connected care pathways essential.

Awareness has improved over time. That part isn’t the issue anymore.

What hasn’t shifted as much is how patients move through the system.

This reflects a broader pattern seen across women’s health and primary care, where fragmented pathways continue to affect how conditions are recognised and managed.

What is endometriosis?

Endometriosis is a chronic condition where tissue similar to the lining of the uterus grows outside the uterus. It most often affects the ovaries, fallopian tubes, and pelvic lining, although it can extend beyond that.

Symptoms don’t always present neatly:

  • ongoing pelvic pain

  • severe menstrual pain

  • pain during intercourse

  • heavy or irregular bleeding

  • fatigue

  • fertility challenges

Some women notice symptoms early on. Others describe a gradual shift — things getting worse or just harder to ignore.

The difficulty is that none of these symptoms point clearly in one direction. They overlap with conditions like irritable bowel syndrome or pelvic inflammatory disease. Imaging may or may not show anything useful. And often, confirmation still relies on laparoscopy.

Even when endometriosis is suspected, getting to a firm diagnosis can take time.

Why diagnosis is delayed

Some of the delay starts with how symptoms are framed early on. Severe menstrual pain is still, in many cases, brushed off as expected. For younger patients especially, that framing can linger longer than it should.

Clinical pathways also play a part. Because surgery is required for confirmation, initial management tends to focus on symptom control. That’s reasonable, but it does extend the process of diagnosis and treatment, potentially delaying timely interventions that could improve patient outcomes.

Then there’s the structure around care itself.

Many women move between providers over several years: GPs, gynaecologists, imaging services, pain specialists, physiotherapists, and sometimes fertility clinics. Each consultation adds something useful. The problem is that those pieces don’t always come together.

Patients often end up repeating their history at each visit. Investigations are sometimes duplicated. Small details become lost between referrals.

When care is spread across multiple providers with no shared record, the patient often becomes the only thread connecting the whole story.

Some studies suggest that a large proportion of women with endometriosis receive a different diagnosis earlier in their journey, which can further complicate the path forward, as highlighted by Endometriosis Australia.

Where the system falls short

On paper, the pathway looks logical. In practice, it can feel scattered.

Results live in different systems. Referrals arrive with limited context. What’s already been tried—or ruled out—isn’t always obvious to the next clinician in line.

Over time, many patients start holding that picture together themselves. They keep track of symptoms, manage appointments, and try to piece together what’s happening across providers.

It works, to a point. But it also points to the gaps.

Without a shared view of the patient’s history, recognising patterns gets slower than it needs to. What could come together earlier, such as timely sharing of patient information and collaborative decision-making among healthcare providers, ends up taking years.

Continuity isn't a luxury — it's what allows the system to work the way it's supposed to.

Why coordination matters

Improving diagnosis isn’t only about better tests or faster access. It’s also about continuity — how well information carries from one setting to the next.

When clinicians can see what’s already happened—previous investigations, symptom progression, earlier decisions—the conversation changes. Less time is spent retracing steps. More time goes into figuring out what’s still missing.

In a more connected setup:

  • Histories carry forward rather than restarting.

  • existing results are easier to access and interpret

  • Referrals happen with more context.

  • Follow-up is less likely to fall away.

In a connected care environment, no single clinician needs to hold the full picture alone— because the system holds it for them.

None of this is particularly complex. But it does require the system to behave somewhat differently than it often does now.

Supporting more connected care

None of these changes are complex on their own. The challenge is making them work in practice.

In most settings, information still sits in different places. Referrals move, but the context doesn’t always move with them. What one clinician knows doesn’t automatically carry through to the next.

That’s where things start to slow down.

As a response, more structured approaches to clinician engagement and education are being explored, including programmes designed to improve coordination across care settings.

There’s been a gradual shift towards tools that make this easier—not by changing clinical decisions but by improving how information is shared. In practical terms, that means clearer referral pathways, better visibility of previous investigations, and less reliance on patients to fill in the gaps.

For conditions like endometriosis, where care often stretches across multiple providers over time, that continuity makes a difference. It reduces the need to start from the beginning at each step.

It doesn’t solve the complexity of the condition, which includes various symptoms and treatment options that can differ significantly among patients. But it does lessen the emotional burden and confusion that often accompany the diagnostic process.

Beyond diagnosis

By the time many women receive a diagnosis, they’ve already been living with symptoms for years — often without a clear explanation.

That time doesn’t sit in the background. It affects how people move through work, study, and relationships, leading to increased stress and potential disruptions in their daily lives. Plans are adjusted. Some things are put off. Others are quietly worked around.

Pain and fatigue tend to become part of the routine, even when they shouldn’t be.

The impact of delayed diagnosis extends well beyond the clinical setting — into work, relationships, and everyday life.

Getting a diagnosis doesn’t undo that time. But it does change what happens next—there's finally a direction, something to work from, rather than continuing in uncertainty.

Looking ahead

There’s more attention on women’s health now than there has been in the past, and that’s starting to show. Awareness is better. Conversations are happening earlier.

Even so, progress depends on how well different parts of the system connect, such as the collaboration between healthcare providers, patients, and support services.

Clinicians tend to make more contextual decisions when they have access to more comprehensive information. Patterns are easier to identify. The pathway becomes somewhat clearer.

For patients, that can mean reaching a diagnosis sooner and spending less time in the unknown.

A final thought

Improving diagnosis timelines in endometriosis isn’t about one breakthrough or one change. It’s about a series of small improvements — in how symptoms are taken seriously, how information is shared, and how care is coordinated.

For healthcare providers looking to better understand and engage with these challenges, exploring broader resources, insights, and structured programmes can be a useful place to start.

RxTro supports more connected care across Australia — find out more →

 

By RxTro
18/03/2026 02:04
General Health & Wellness
Image for blog.png

Australia is facing a rising cancer burden: in 2023, about 165,000 new cases were diagnosed (≈ 452 per day), and 51,300 people died from cancer (≈ 140 per day). While imaging services are widely available, access to radiologists is uneven — for example, the Northern Territory has only ~2 active clinical radiologists per 100,000 people compared to ~10–11 per 100,000 in several other states.

This highlights the critical role radiologists play in cancer care and the challenge of ensuring timely screening and diagnosis for Australians in rural and remote areas.

 

Radiologists in Screening Programs

National screening programs highlight just how visible their work is. For instance, take BreastScreen Australia, where over 1.7 million women participated in 2020–21, and radiologists helped identify more than 11,000 cancers. Every single mammogram in this programme is read by at least two radiologists to maximise accuracy.

Beyond breast screening, radiologists are also central to lung cancer trials, where CT scans are being tested in high-risk groups, and they play a key role in assessing follow-up investigations for bowel and cervical cancer. Although patients may never meet the radiologist face to face, their expertise is woven into every stage of Australia’s screening programs.

The Rural Access Challenge

While city residents may take access to imaging for granted, the picture is very different outside metropolitan Australia. Only around 12–14% of radiologists practise in regional and rural areas. This workforce imbalance creates barriers such as:

  • Reporting scans often results in longer wait times.

  • Limited access to advanced imaging like MRI or PET, often requires long travel.

  • Fewer interventional radiology services exist outside major centres.

These barriers matter. A delayed scan can mean a delayed diagnosis, which in turn can affect treatment options and outcomes.

The good news is that technology is starting to bridge this gap. Teleradiology services allow specialists in metropolitan centres to report scans taken at rural hospitals. Mobile imaging units bring mammography and CT closer to communities. And increasingly, digital appointment booking and coordination platforms are helping clinics connect patients with imaging services more efficiently — reducing bottlenecks and making access smoother, even when specialists are based far away.

Rural Australians still face challenges, but these innovations show how smarter systems can help ensure timely cancer care, regardless of postcode.




Teamwork Behind the Scenes

 

Radiologists rarely meet patients face to face, yet their input is central to how cancer care unfolds. In multidisciplinary team meetings (MDTs), they present imaging findings alongside oncologists, surgeons, and pathologists. These discussions often shape the entire treatment plan.

A single scan can have significant implications. It may show if surgery is possible, how extensive it should be, or if chemotherapy or radiotherapy is best. Radiologists also help monitor whether treatment is working — or if plans need to change.

For patients, this behind-the-scenes teamwork can make the difference between early, effective intervention and delayed, more complex care.

Looking Ahead: Access, Collaboration, and Better Outcomes

From the first mammogram to follow-up scans years after treatment, radiologists are silent but essential partners in the cancer journey. Their expertise ensures cancers are detected earlier, diagnosed more accurately, and monitored effectively.

For Australians—especially those in rural and remote areas— access to radiologists isn’t just a matter of logistics. It can determine how quickly cancer is found, how effectively it’s treated, and ultimately, the chance of survival.

At the same time, the way healthcare teams work together is changing. Radiologists are increasingly looking to connect more directly with GPs and primary care providers through digital platforms that simplify appointment booking and streamline referrals. This makes it easier for clinics to link patients with the right imaging services, reduce bottlenecks, and ensure results flow quickly back to the treating team.

 

 

By RxTro
24/09/2025 11:07
Programs
CPD-accredited learning and professional development programs
In Person
Example Text
Modern Orthotics and Pectus Bracing: A Practical Overview for General Practice
In Person
Example Text
Breaking News: Australia’s first personalised breast screening program
In Person
Example Text
Endocrine Surgery Topics for GP's
Events
Webinars, sessions, and industry events for healthcare professionals
image

Camberwell Medical Group x SleepWise Clinic

07/08/2026 00:15
566 Riversdale Road Camberwell VIC 3124
Event Type
image

Intensive Trauma Therapy: Innovations in Modern PTSD Treatment-2

21/05/2026 07:30
Event Type
image

Bladder cancer and upper tract urothelial cancer - what GPs should know

30/04/2026 19:00
Event Type