” THE 2016-17 Budget is described by the Prime Minister as a national economic plan focused on the long term. That does not ring true for the health budget, which presents more as a statement of politics and short-term fixes.
The subtext is that there is no vision or commitment to necessary health care reforms in primary care, clinician payments, mental health and Closing the Gap on Indigenous disadvantage.”
Dr Lesley Russell is an Adjunct Associate Professor at the Menzies Centre for Health Policy at the University of Sydney. As Published MJA
” The AHHA calls on all candidates to commit to an innovative patient-centred health system founded in well-resourced prevention and primary care, and integrated effectively with the hospital sector, universal healthcare principles, and long-term sustainable funding.
“A priority for the incoming 45th Commonwealth Parliament must be to ensure that our health system provides affordable, accessible quality care to all Australians, both now and into the future”
AHHA Chief Executive Alison Verhoeven from full press release below
Have your say on 12 May follow #IHMayDay16 and #Healthelection16
The big spending commitments were already known. The additional $2.9 billion over 3 years to public hospitals and the commitment to activity-based funding is welcome, although this represents less than half the funding cut in the 2014-15 Budget.
There are references to associated initiatives to improve quality and safety and to tackle avoidable hospital admissions and readmissions, but there is no further information in either the Council of Australian Governments communiqué or the Budget papers.
Much has been made of the accompanying announcement of a trial of Health Care Homes. This is a progressive move, but hardly the biggest reform to Medicare since its inception, as touted by the Prime Minister. There are some concerns about the ability of this initiative to deliver as it is clearly under-resourced, there are workforce implications and the timeframe for evaluation is too short. It was disconcerting to find that the funding for this initiative ($21 million over 3 years) comes from changes made to the Practice Incentives Program.
The robbing-Peter-to-pay-Paul principle is found elsewhere in the Budget.
The new Child and Adult Public Dental Scheme is funded ($1.7 billion over 4 years) by abolishing two current public dental programs, which were cut by more than $500 million in previous budgets.
The Budget papers are difficult to interpret, but aside from the obvious requirement to do more with less, it seems that there have been substantial savings.
This sleight of hand exemplifies the problems with this Budget: there is no coherent policy underpinning the measures and no effort to align the interfaces between health, aged care and disability services to help coordinate patients’ care. So we see cuts of $1.2 billion in aged care on the basis that the growth in claims for complex care are unsustainable.
A raft of measures in this Budget add to the so-called “zombie measures”, which are still on the books from previous budgets, to push an increasing cost burden on patients, which will severely impact their ability to afford the services they need. This sets up a vicious cycle with accumulating costs in acute care.
Doctors now find themselves trapped by the government into a situation where they must weigh decisions about the financial viability of their practices against the ability of their most needy patients to pay.
While GPs and specialists are entitled to feel aggrieved at the extension of the Medicare rebate freeze, which contributes a further $925 million to the Treasury coffers, the real burden falls to their patients who already face substantial out-of-pocket costs.
The combined impact of a continuing Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) freeze, an additional $5 co-payment for prescription drugs, the removal of bulk-billing incentives for pathology and diagnostic imaging, and changes to the Medicare safety nets will be substantial. On top of this, private health insurance (PHI) premiums rose an average of 5.6% this year, and the Budget takes savings of $744 million by ensuring that more people without cover will be penalised via the Medicare levy surcharge and that the means-tested PHI rebate will apply to fewer people.
Government policies such as these are undermining the universality of Medicare and opening up even greater health disparities. We all pay the price for this.
A key criticism of the government’s approach to the funding and delivery of health care services is that the focus is on illness treatment – the ambulance at the bottom of the cliff, when what is also needed is a fence at the top. It’s hard to claim that an increase in the tobacco excise rates is a health prevention measure when the $4.7 billion over 4 years it raises goes to deliver tax breaks. There is nothing in the Budget to tackle obesity or the health consequences of climate change. Those cans and costs are simply kicked down the road.
Implicit in the Budget is an unwillingness to take an agile and flexible approach to modernising Medicare. That responsibility has been hived off to the Primary Health Networks, which must commission and coordinate services, deliver mental health reforms, and tackle the ice epidemic and suicide rates.
In Canberra, recommendations from expert groups, such as the National Health and Hospitals Reform Commission and the National Mental Health Commission, languish or are reinvented by more advisory groups.
The valuable consultative work of the MBS review continues slowly, alongside that of the Medical Services Advisory Committee and Choosing Wisely Australia. But it is galling to see that the savings achieved (a total of $71.3 million over 4 years in this Budget) are not further invested in the MBS.
The 2016-17 Budget has been designed to ameliorate the patent unfairness of previous budgets and to take the Turnbull government into an election. Clearly we must look elsewhere for a health care vision, needed reforms and policies.
The election awaits!
Dr Lesley Russell is an Adjunct Associate Professor at the Menzies Centre for Health Policy at the University of Sydney.
2016 Election priority: Healthy Australia with best possible health system
8 May 2016
The Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association (AHHA) has called for all candidates in the 2016 federal election to commit to working together for a healthy Australia supported by the best possible health system.
“A priority for the incoming 45th Commonwealth Parliament must be to ensure that our health system provides affordable, accessible quality care to all Australians, both now and into the future” AHHA Chief Executive Alison Verhoeven said.
“The Commonwealth has a vital leadership role to play in supporting better integrated and coordinated patient-centred care across the primary, acute, aged and disability care sectors.”
Australia’s healthcare system consistently outperforms other OECD countries when comparing key health indicators and costs, but burdens such as an ageing population, increased rates of chronic and complex disease, and new medical technologies and treatments, are presenting new challenges and increasing the cost of care.
The AHHA calls on all candidates to commit to an innovative patient-centred health system founded in well-resourced prevention and primary care, and integrated effectively with the hospital sector, universal healthcare principles, and long-term sustainable funding.
“Maintaining the status quo and tinkering around the edges of system reform will not provide the future-proofed health system that Australians expect and deserve. Now is the time to rethink traditional approaches and bring our 20th century health system firmly into the 21st century.
“All parties must work constructively to achieve an effective contemporary healthcare system supporting a healthy Australia. Healthcare is a top priority for Australians and must be a top priority for our elected representatives,” Ms Verhoeven said.
For more information on the AHHA, visit http://ahha.asn.au. View this media release online here.
The Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association is the national peak body for public and not-for-profit hospitals, community and primary healthcare services, and advocates for universal, high quality and affordable healthcare to benefit the whole community.