I think I already said this, but just to make my point concrete, I have been to a rural school before. Majority of the students I have witnessed have one thing in common. Lack of motivation. If you have motivation to do well, it is INFINITESIMALLY easier to have a chance into med as opposed to an urban student who has to go through hell to b6 all their subjects to have a 0.01% chance of getting an interview. My tutor was talking about how students with 90 atars got into UNSW medicine with reasonably low ucat percentiles. And in all honesty, I know students who have achieved 99.85s in 400+ ranked schools so its definately not impossible to get a high atar. If you learn how to gather resources, possibly get tutoring (I did dr du online when I was rural and that got me 1st rank in the prelims in my old school), maintain your time wisely, maybe pick subjects that you both enjoy and scale well, then nothing will stop you. I don't think its a matter of 'oh I disagree, this is all your opinions'. It's simply fact. Urban students are significantly more disadvantaged in the journey to medicine.
There are also less jobs which is one of the reasons why my family moved this yr. All the clinics were bulk billed n shite, honestly not something you want to do esp w a career that demands full attention. Medical practitioners are overstaffed and the clients in clinics are usually older (as the older generation usually migrate to more rural areas) and therefore harder cases. This is simply not feasible for a healthy balance between work and life.