Clinical Prioritisation Criteria

Clinical Prioritisation Criteria (CPC) are clinical decision support tools.

It provides clinical assessment, management and referral advice for health providers.

The criteria is to ensure:

  • referrals have all the information they need for triage
  • appointments are given in order of clinical urgency
  • patients are ready for care at their first appointment
  • improved referral and communication processes between referrers and specialist outpatient services.

Read more about Clinical Prioritisation Criteria on the Queensland Government website.

HealthPathways

HealthPathways is a hospital referral guideline that includes the clinical prioritisation criteria.

GPs should use HealthPathways at the point of care. It can also be used by hospital specialists, nurses, allied health and other health professionals in the Central Queensland region.

The pathways were developed by hospital clinicians and general practice teams.

How to access HealthPathways

If you’re a health professional and you’d like to access Central Queensland HealthPathways, you can contact the coordinator by registering on the HealthPathways website.

If you’re a referring health provider, you can find contact information on the Healthpathways website.

Smart Referrals

We have general and specific referral requirements aligned with the statewide Clinical Prioritisation Criteria for specialist and allied health outpatient services.

You can send referrals electronically using Smart Referrals, Medical Objects or by fax. Sending electronically is the preferred option.

Learn more and get further resources about Smart Referrals on the Queensland Health website.

Referring a patient to a hospital emergency department

If you're a GP, you don’t need to call the emergency department unless you're seeking clinical advice.

Make sure your patient has their referral letter with them. You can fax any additional information to the emergency department if you need to.

If your patient is arriving by ambulance, make sure they have their referral letter and any clinical handover documents with them.