Expedited SIMG pathway brings 368 GPs in 2025
The Medical Board of Australia released figures for the first full year since the expedited SIMG registration pathway began. In 2025, 368 specialist GPs applied for the program and started supervised...
Healthcare regulation refers to the rules, standards, and oversight mechanisms that govern how healthcare services, products, and professionals operate. Regulation aims to protect patient safety, ensure quality of care, and promote transparency and accountability across the health system. In Australia, healthcare regulation touches every aspect of care delivery — from clinical practice standards and facility licensing to medicines approval, data governance, and digital health compliance.
Effective regulation builds trust in health systems by safeguarding patients, setting clear expectations for providers, and reducing risk. It balances innovation with safety — enabling new technologies and treatments to thrive while ensuring that efficacy, ethics, privacy, and equity are upheld. Without strong regulatory frameworks, healthcare quality and public confidence can suffer.
Healthcare regulation covers clinical standards, professional licensure, facility accreditation, medicines and devices approval, patient privacy and data security, and health service billing and coding compliance. In the digital age, regulation also includes frameworks for telehealth practice, interoperability, cybersecurity, and the ethical use of AI and health data.
Australia’s healthcare regulatory landscape involves multiple national and state bodies working together to protect public health. Key agencies oversee health practitioner registration, medicines and therapeutic goods, safety and quality in hospitals and aged care, and compliance with privacy and data laws. Recent trends include increased focus on digital health standards, data interoperability, and strengthening consumer protections.
Regulatory frameworks evolve in response to emerging evidence, technologies, and system pressures. Staying informed on healthcare regulation developments helps providers, innovators, policymakers, and patients navigate requirements, anticipate changes, and identify opportunities. This page curates the latest news and analysis in healthcare regulation across Australia and beyond.
The Medical Board of Australia released figures for the first full year since the expedited SIMG registration pathway began. In 2025, 368 specialist GPs applied for the program and started supervised...
The Therapeutic Goods Administration has broadened its 2026–27 priority areas to cover unapproved peptide products amid rising imports, online advertising and safety concerns. Deputy secretary Anthony...
The Medical Board of Australia released two reports on pathways for specialist international medical graduates SIMGs seeking specialist registration. In the first full year with the expedited SIMG pro...
From 1 July 2026, general practices that send SMS messages to patients for appointment reminders, test results or prescription updates must use registered sender IDs. If a sender ID is not registered,...
DoHDA has issued new FAQs ahead of July 1 changes to assignment of benefit for bulk-billed services. From 1 July, patients must provide an electronic or hard-copy signature and the signed agreement mu...
The Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA) released a statement urging practitioners, especially in regional and remote areas, to consider telehealth as an alternative during the pet...
Paragraph 1: Doctors face high stakes mandatory reporting decisions in Australia, where colleagues must decide if a concern about impaired practice, intoxication, sexual misconduct, or major departure...
The Department of Veterans’ Affairs has published a new integrity framework for every organisation involved in veteran care. It outlines seven expectations, urging providers to prioritise veterans, ac...
AHPRA is at the centre of sustained media criticism over how it handles clinicians involved in the gender-affirming treatment debate. Critics question the regulator’s neutrality, its links with advoca...
On 14 May 2026 the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners released a position statement on telehealth only care. It argues telehealth should not replace routine in person care and that cons...
Australia appears to be adopting NHS-style policy levers through changes to bulk billing for general practice. The government has tied a 12.5 per cent practice incentive to 100 per cent bulk billing o...
The Australian Medical Association joined the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners in criticising the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare’s draft data governance framework for the...
From 1 July this year the federal AML/CTF regime expands to designated services, broadening oversight beyond gambling, bullion and financial firms. The change is framed around what a service does, not...
The Australian published pieces questioning AHPRA’s independence on transgender issues. In response, AHPRA CEO Justin Untersteiner and Medical Board of Australia chair Dr Susan O'Dwyer released a join...
The European Medicines Agency has launched a pilot to test a new regulatory path for breakthrough medical devices in the European Union. The aim is to speed patient access to highly innovative technol...
The RACGP has urged the Australian National Audit Office to press DoHDA on the risks of using AI to monitor Medicare non-compliance. In an April 2026 submission, the college argued AI should be avoide...
The Medical Republic is hosting a free expert panel webinar on prevention on 28 April 2026 from 12:30 PM to 1:30 PM AEST. The session features Travis Grant from Accenture Health, A/Prof Alam Yoosuff o...
Australian health policy circles are weighing a licensing regime for doctors around the safe use of medical AI. The idea is in the thinking stage and would start with a compulsory AI training componen...
Medicinal cannabis prescriptions in Australia declined sharply in the second half of 2025, according to the Penington Institute. The report, using data from the Federal Department of Health, Disabilit...