Kiwis attempting to sidestep doctor's fees while holidaying in Australia could soon be turned away from Sydney hospitals.
The New South Wales Department of Health is drafting a new overseas policy to crackdown on a growing trend where tourists are visiting the emergency departments for minor ailments because it is free instead of paying to be seen by a GP in a private practice, according to the Sydney Morning Herald.
The Australian government has a Reciprocal Health Care Agreement with New Zealand, the UK and some European countries, which entitles their citizens to free "medically necessary treatment" in public hospitals.
But the agreement does not include general practitioners in private practices and there have been claims tourists were abusing the agreement by going to the hospital for any kind of treatment.
Sydney's St Vincent's emergency services director Gordian Fulde told the Sydney Morning Herald the hospital had seen a 24 per cent increase in these treatments in 2013 compared to the previous year and a large number tourists wanting treatment for a variety of minor ailments including flu symptoms and chest infections.