More after-hours urgent care for Victorian Kids

Victorian families, including those in Melton and Moorabool, will be able to access more free alternatives to visiting a busy emergency department with the opening of two after-hours Children’s Priority Primary Care Centres (PPCC).

The two new centres will be open at the Monash Children’s Hospital and the Royal Children’s Hospital.

Operating at night and on the weekend, Monash Children’s PPCC has already seen more than 450 patients since opening – ensuring sick kids are getting the appropriate care they need, as soon as they need it.

The Monash Children’s PPCC accepts bookings by phone and online, while the Royal Children’s Hospital aims to reduce hospital pressure and is dedicated only to referrals from their emergency department.

While both centres have been designed specifically with kids in mind, all PPCCs are well equipped to treat children and families are encouraged to attend their closest PPCC to get the quickest possible care.

With 24 PPCCs now open including one at Mildura, close to 55,000 Victorians have now received care at a PPCC since they started progressively opening late last year.

Caring for around 4,000 Victorians each and every week, of which half would have otherwise attended their closest emergency department – PPCCs are free to all Victorians, with or without a Medicare card – with most clinics accepting both walk-ins and pre-booked appointments.

Staffed with both GPs and nurses, PPCCs can treat a range of common ailments that require urgent attention but not a hospital-led response, such as such as minor infections, cuts and burns – saving families time waiting in an emergency department and from waiting, as well as paying, to see a GP.

A further two PPCCs will open next month in Bendigo and Sunbury, which are being delivered alongside other measures to ease health system pressures including the expanded Victorian Virtual ED and Better at Home programs, Ambulance Victoria’s Secondary Triage Service and GP respiratory clinics.

The centres are being delivered as part of a $70 million investment from the state government.

“With almost half of patients presenting to PPCCs after hours and around a third of them being children, we’re giving Victorian families the high-quality care when and where they need it,” Health Minister Mary-Anne Thomas said.