Queensland general practitioners (GPs) have long been pivotal in delivering comprehensive healthcare across diverse medical contexts, yet their involvement in voluntary assisted dying (VAD) service provision remains fraught with systemic and procedural challenges. A groundbreaking study led by researchers at Queensland University of Technology (QUT) provides unprecedented insight into the varied experiences of 12 Queensland GPs during the crucial inaugural year of the state’s VAD legislation. Published recently in the Australian Journal of General Practice, this research unveils the complex interplay of professional, administrative, and ethical factors that shape GP participation in assisted dying, exposing systemic inefficiencies that curtail the potential of primary care in this sensitive domain.
At the heart of the investigation is the recognition that GPs’ broad-spectrum clinical expertise and their sustained, trust-based relationships with patients ideally situate them to facilitate VAD. Nonetheless, empirical findings indicate significant disparities in practice engagement—from practitioners entirely abstaining from involvement to a subset managing over 50 cases within the first year. Such variability underscores an urgent need to address systemic barriers impeding consistent participation. Central obstacles include the labyrinthine regulatory paperwork and procedural rigor demanded from clinicians, which many participants described as complex and time-consuming, exacerbating concerns about procedural errors. This intricacy is amplified for GPs who sporadically encounter VAD requests, intensifying apprehension around compliance and correct protocol adherence.
A notable source of confusion pertains to patient eligibility criteria for VAD, a matter compounded by inconsistent communication and insufficient education regarding the statutory parameters governing such requests. Given Queensland’s distinctive VAD model, where approximately 90% of assisted deaths occur within the public health infrastructure, community-based GPs face additional hurdles due to the centralized nature of care delivery. This structural centralization, while facilitating equitable access across the state, inadvertently marginalizes practitioners operating outside hospital or government systems, limiting community GP involvement and consequently impacting patient care continuity.
Dr Laura Ley Greaves, the study’s lead author and a QUT PhD researcher, emphasized the misalignment between the holistic, patient-centered ethos innately embedded within general practice and the highly bureaucratic framework enveloping VAD provision. According to Dr Ley Greaves, the intricate training requirements, procedural formalities, and notably the absence of clear financial remuneration present considerable deterrents, particularly for practitioners in private or smaller community clinics reliant on Medicare support. The study’s findings illuminate the fiscal disincentives that precipitate under-engagement, calling into question the sustainability of current funding models in supporting equitable community GP participation.
Adding a further dimension, co-author Dr Rachel Feeney highlights the pervasive uncertainty experienced by GPs regarding fundamental aspects of VAD—ranging from procedural knowledge to ethical communication strategies. This confusion not only complicates practitioner decision-making but also risks undermining patient access to accurate and empathetic guidance. The data suggest that comprehensive, standardized education tailored to the primary care context is indispensable. Such educational initiatives would not only empower GPs who undertake authorized VAD roles but also support those who, while not directly involved, serve as vital conduits for preliminary patient consultation and navigation through end-of-life options.
Temporal and geographic disparities also emerged as salient themes from the research, with rural and regional GPs reporting unequal access to required training and support mechanisms. These inequities signal a pressing need for geographically inclusive policy adaptations and resource allocations to ensure uniform competency and service availability irrespective of location. Given that voluntary assisted dying sits at the confluence of clinical practice and complex ethical-legal frameworks, tailored regional strategies are critical to uphold standards of care and legal compliance across Queensland’s diverse healthcare landscape.
Importantly, the study posits that augmenting GP participation could have broad system-level benefits, not least by alleviating pressures on the public healthcare apparatus predominantly tasked with VAD service delivery. A robust, well-supported community-based GP workforce could offer enhanced continuity of care, fostering deepened patient rapport and streamlined clinical pathways during end-of-life stages. This expanded engagement could also serve as a de facto quality assurance mechanism, embedding patient-centered values and minimizing fragmentation within VAD provision.
However, such a transformation hinges on addressing entrenched structural impediments. The convoluted application processes and onerous paperwork currently required demand simplification to reduce administrative burden. Furthermore, establishing dedicated remuneration frameworks—such as a Medicare rebate specifically for VAD-related consultations—remains paramount to enabling financially viable participation from community GPs. Without such institutional reforms, the sector risks perpetuating uneven service access and practitioner burnout.
The Queensland study forms part of a more extensive longitudinal project analyzing VAD implementation across multiple domains, supported by the Australian Government Research Training Program. This expansive research effort taps into a multidisciplinary knowledge base, with contributions from internationally recognized experts including Emeritus Professor Lindy Willmott and Professor Ben White. Their expertise in end-of-life law and voluntary assisted dying provisions enhances the study’s analytical rigor and policy relevance.
The findings will be central to discussions at the forthcoming International Conference on Assisted Dying and Other End of Life Care, hosted by QUT’s Australian Centre for Health Law Research. This event promises to catalyze knowledge exchange among global stakeholders, from healthcare practitioners to legal scholars, fostering enriched frameworks designed to reconcile ethical, clinical, and policy imperatives surrounding assisted dying.
Taken together, this research underscores that while GPs possess intrinsic capabilities and relational depth essential for compassionate VAD provision, the existing operational environment inhibits widespread participation. Addressing this gap through targeted policy reforms, streamlined regulatory frameworks, equitable education, and appropriate financial incentives is critical. Doing so promises to not only improve service sustainability but also uphold the dignity and autonomy of patients navigating one of life’s most profound final decisions.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: General practitioners’ experiences of voluntary assisted dying in Queensland
News Publication Date: 1-Feb-2026
Web References:
Australian Journal of General Practice – Article Link
International Conference on Assisted Dying and Other End of Life Care
References:
DOI: 10.31128/AJGP-06-25-7702
Image Credits: QUT
Keywords: Euthanasia, Gerontology, Organ donation, Western medicine, Doctor-patient relationship, Caregivers, Health care delivery, Medical ethics, Nursing, Medical facilities, Public policy, Human health

