A Perth patient, Millie Muroi, describes visiting a new Medicare urgent care clinic after rolling her ankle badly. According to accounts from multiple outlets, she seeks treatment at the clinic and is assessed within hours. She reports that after about four hours, she leaves with an “unexpected prognosis,” suggesting the outcome differed from what she anticipated when she went in for help.

The articles present the experience as a personal account of care access and medical assessment through the Medicare urgent care model, rather than as a broader policy analysis. While details of the condition and specific diagnosis are not provided in the supplied excerpts, the shared narrative is that the clinic provides timely evaluation and results in a clear treatment outlook by the time the patient departs.

Across the sources, the focus remains on the patient’s experience at the clinic—how the initial injury led her to the urgent care setting, the timeframe for the consultation, and the overall reaction to the prognosis she received.