25 Years of GPRA
Dr Sama Balasubramanian: Q and A
How and when were you involved with GPRA?
I first became involved with GPRA in early 2016 as a Registrar Liaison Officer (RLO) with GP Synergy. I attended an Advisory Council meeting in Brisbane, and that really sparked my interest in the organisation and its role – it felt like a union, but not a union, with genuine influence in shaping policy.
From there, I stepped into a Director position and then became GPRA President following Dr Melanie Smith, serving through 2019–2020, including during the COVID period. After my presidency, I stayed on as a Board member and later as a Registrar Advisor, supporting registrars with workplace issues, contracts, pay concerns, and advocacy – often providing a level of anonymity and support beyond what’s available locally.
My involvement has really spanned all levels – from grassroots advocacy as an RLO, to national leadership as President, and then acting as a conduit between the two as a Registrar Advisor.
During my time as President, we also strengthened relationships with key organisations like the AMA and government bodies, and contributed to important work modelling disparities in pay and conditions between GP registrars and their hospital-based counterparts – work that is still referenced today.
What did you learn through GPRA that has stayed with you and shaped your career or leadership journey?
There are a few key things that have really stayed with me.
Firstly, the importance of governance. Understanding how governance works allows you to shape policy and systems in a meaningful way – not just treat individual problems, but actually influence outcomes at a broader level.
Secondly, patience. In advocacy, you might identify a problem today, but the solution may take years and span multiple leadership cycles. That’s just part of the process. Through GPRA, you’re contributing to something bigger than yourself.
And finally, the shift in mindset. As doctors, we’re trained to fix problems quickly. But systems don’t work like that. Policy and advocacy are not like prescribing a treatment – they’re complex, evolving, and require collaboration. Systems create problems, not individuals, and real change comes from understanding that and working collectively to improve them.
That experience has shaped how I approach leadership and advocacy in my career today.
Looking back, how would you describe GPRA’s evolution as an organisation over the past 25 years?
GPRA has evolved from a small group of individuals wanting to make a difference into a mature organisation with strong links into government and the broader health system.
It has built resilience through major changes in the training landscape – from the formation and dissolution of Regional Training Organisations to the transition back to the Colleges – while maintaining its core purpose.
What started as a platform to give registrars a voice has become the voice itself.
One of GPRA’s key strengths has been its independence. It sits outside the colleges, which allows it to provide an honest and authentic perspective on the registrar experience. That independence, combined with strong corporate knowledge and lived experience from clinicians, has enabled GPRA to continue advocating effectively over time.
It’s also shown remarkable resilience – including maintaining funding and relevance through significant structural changes in general practice training.
In 25 words or less, what should the next 25 years look like for GPRA?
Listen, be the voice, ignore the noise.
If you could give one piece of advice to today’s future GPs, what would it be?
Look after yourselves and look after each other – that way you can be the change that meets the needs of the community.
Finish this sentence: “GPRA’s impact on general practice in Australia has been…”
… necessary.”
About GPRA
General Practice Registrars Australia (GPRA) is the national independent voice for future GPs in Australia (www.gpra.org.au)
Note: The views shared in GPRA’s 25th anniversary interviews reflect the personal experiences and perspectives of each contributor and do not necessarily represent the views of General Practice Registrars Australia.


















