23 December 2025

Woden gets its own Medicare Urgent Care Clinic

| By Chris Johnson
Join the conversation
15

ACT Senator Katy Gallagher and Member for Bean David Smith (back row, second from right) with staff at the Woden Urgent Care Clinic. Photo: Supplied.

Woden joins the Canberra areas to benefit from the opening of a Medicare Urgent Care Clinic.

The Woden Medicare Urgent Care Clinic, located at 33 Colbee Court in Phillip, is now open seven days a week for extended hours.

Launching the clinic’s new service arrangements yesterday (22 December), ACT Senator Katy Gallagher said no appointment would be needed, patients can walk in and all services will be bulk-billed.

“Every Canberran deserves fast, free care when health issues can’t wait but aren’t life-threatening,” she said.

“The new Woden Medicare Urgent Care Clinic delivers exactly that, walk in any day of the week, see a GP-led team, and get bulk-billed care without the stress of an emergency department visit.

“This clinic will ease pressure on Canberra Hospital and give families the practical support they need, while strengthening Medicare right here in the ACT.”

About 44 per cent of presentations at the Canberra Hospital in 2023-24 were for semi-urgent or non-urgent conditions.

READ ALSO CSIRO’s mid-year budget boost not enough to stop mass job cuts

The Woden clinic will be led by general practitioners and complement the existing network of five Medicare Urgent Care Clinics across Canberra, including Gungahlin, Belconnen, Dickson, Weston Creek, and Tuggeranong.

Member for Bean, Labor’s David Smith, said the clinic’s highly trained doctors and nurses were equipped to treat a range of conditions and injuries that need urgent attention but aren’t life threatening, including cuts, viral infections, or a sprained ankle.

“This GP-led clinic will make a real difference for locals by providing convenient, bulk-billed urgent care right here in the heart of Woden,” he said.

“The opening of the clinic is a huge win for our community, taking the pressure off the emergency department at the Canberra Hospital.

“People will be able to walk in, get quality care, and head home without an ED wait or an out-of-pocket bill.”

Around Australia, more than 100 Medicare Urgent Care Clinics have now been established as part of the Federal Government’s commitment to deliver more Medicare Urgent Care Clinics across the country.

Medicare Urgent Care Clinics have already seen more than 2.2 million presentations since the first sites opened in June 2023, including more than 279,000 presentations to Medicare Urgent Care Clinics in the Australian Capital Territory.

The aim is for four out of five Australians to live within a 20 minutes’ drive from their local clinic.

READ ALSO Trust, democracy, family reunions and tax

New data from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare shows the clinics across the ACT are easing pressure on Canberra’s hospitals.

Non-urgent presentations to Canberra emergency departments have dropped by 3.9 per cent.

The Woden Medicare Urgent Care Clinic is commissioned by the Capital Health Network, the Primary Health Network for the Australian Capital Territory.

Federal Health Minister Mark Butler described the Woden clinic as a “game-changer for families” in Canberra.

“The Woden Medicare Urgent Care Clinic will ease pressure on the emergency department at the Canberra Hospital and free up staff at the hospital to provide care to people with more serious conditions,” the Minister said.

“This clinic is a key part of the Albanese Government’s commitment to strengthen Medicare and make health care more accessible and affordable.”

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has also made a big deal of saying visits to all GPs should only require “your Medicare card and not your credit card” and continues with the catchphrase despite ample evidence of credit cards still being needed by most for a visit to the doctor.

Free Daily Digest

Want the best Canberra news delivered daily? We package the most-read Canberra stories and send them to your inbox. Sign-up now for trusted local news that will never be behind a paywall.
Loading
By submitting your email address you are agreeing to Region Group's terms and conditions and privacy policy.

Join the conversation

15
All Comments
  • All Comments
  • Website Comments
LatestOldest

Where was Fiona Carrick or any of the other opposition MLA’s in this electorate welcoming the new GP led, bulk billed Urgent Care Centre in Woden that they have been screaming for?

Open 7 days a week for extended periods, easing pressure on our hospitals!

As usual silent and absent!

I think you mean not invited

Why would they need to be invited?

Capital Retro4:37 pm 23 Dec 25

“Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has also made a big deal of saying visits to all GPs should only require “your Medicare card and not your credit card” and continues with the catchphrase despite ample evidence of credit cards still being needed by most for a visit to the doctor.”

Yes CR Albanese has frequently used the term in reference to strengthening Medicare and reducing out-of-pocket costs. A universal health care system introduced by Labor and trashed by the Liberals. A health care system lauded around the world and a returned Labor government promising to restore it to what it was originally intended to be. Ensuring its long-term viability and offering incentives where the Medicare card is sufficient for most GP visits without the need to pay large fees upfront.

Who could argue with that?

Yes there are criticisms that reforms are too slow and corruption is still rife after years of being run-down by successive Liberal governments!

Waiting back in 2010, where the health fund was redirected to the tram

Capital Retro6:56 pm 24 Dec 25

Sounds just like Labor’s NDIS…..Wait!

Thanks Capital!
NDIS is a disability support scheme introduced by Labor to support those in our communities suffering impairment. Unfortunately it was never supported by the Liberals and has become yet another social support program trashed by them when they were last in government. Again we are seeing Labor fixing the mess while the Libs and their supporters snipe from the sidelines!

Gregg Heldon10:55 am 23 Dec 25

Funny that you had to point out who our Federal member was.

There is no “existing network of five Medicare Urgent Care Clinics across Canberra” and the statistic about “279,000 presentations to Medicare Urgent Care Clinics in the Australian Capital Territory” is simply not true as this is the first one.

The existing clinics are ACT Government-run, nurse-led walk-in centres. They do not have GPs.

“The existing clinics are ACT Government-run, nurse-led walk-in centres. They do not have GPs.”

It used to be the case, until they started to be funded by Fed gov as Medicare Urgent Care Clinics.

Hello Canberran
According to the Walk-In-Centre’s website, they still don’t have doctors.

https://www.canberrahealthservices.act.gov.au/services-and-clinics/services/walk-in-centres-wic

Apparently the 5 walk-in clinics have been rebadged as Medicare Urgent Care Clinics. In her email sent to constituents today, Senator Gallagher has carefully named those 5 centres as walk-in centres. Federal Health Minister Butler and ACT Health Minister Stephen-Smith are now calling them Medicare Urgent Care Clinics. There will be problems when people start showing up at the walk-in centres, expecting to see a GP. Once they find out there’s only a doctor at the new Woden clinic, the queues there, and the wait times, will balloon. Seems some politicians are happy to use spin, instead of truth and accuracy.

True, there are no GPs in the old walk-in clinics. I should have left out the last sentence of the quote. The new clinic is indeed a step forward.

Tom Worthington7:46 am 24 Dec 25

I found the nurse run ACT walk in centers, very good and more useful than the doctor staffed one I visited in Melbourne. In Canberra, as well as a diagnosis, I was handed the medicine needed, on the spot. At the Medicare Urgent Care Clinic I visited in Melbourne, I was handed a prescription for the same medicine I had been prescribed in Canberra. I had to wait until a pharmacy opened, kilometers away, on a Sunday morning, before I could have it filled and get some relief.

Daily Digest

Want the best Canberra news delivered daily? Every day we package the most popular Region Canberra stories and send them straight to your inbox. Sign-up now for trusted local news that will never be behind a paywall.

By submitting your email address you are agreeing to Region Group's terms and conditions and privacy policy.