The most appropriate response to the Strengthening Medicare Taskforce report is a “meh” and a slow clap. Heavy on motherhood statements and light on detail (or how and when the detail will be provided), the report is remarkable only for its lack of imagination — and for studiously avoiding two important ways to strengthen Medicare.
It’s not that the content is bad or ill-conceived; it’s that it mostly restates what people have been saying for a decade or more. We know the “what”. We need to flesh out the “how”. In terms of genuine reform, the report hasn’t really advanced our thinking about how to build a healthcare system for the 21st century. There aren’t many new ideas in it.
The lack of imagination is hardly surprising. From the start, the taskforce was dominated by healthcare providers for whom the status quo, while not perfect, is certainly preferable to actual reform that puts the interests of the patient, public and taxpayer first.
For example: “Strengthen funding to support more affordable care, ensuring Australians on low incomes can access primary care at no or low cost.” Well, yes. Of course. Who would disagree? But how about ideas on how to achieve it?
The document contains a few good policy kernels. “Sharing [data] by default” across different providers is a sensible way to make care safer, more integrated and efficient. (Doing this may seem like a no-brainer, but it’s amazing how slow the healthcare system has been to ensure people’s information follows them as they seek care across the system.) It’s good to see patient registration mentioned as another way to improve care continuity and outcomes.
It’s also good to read about comparative feedback to providers about their practice (it would have been even better to see the systematic collection of patient-reported measures mentioned) and the document is right to acknowledges the excellent results of Aboriginal community-controlled health services — a model that would be a good fit for mainstream primary care (as I’ve previously argued).
But elsewhere it is completely out of tune with current thinking. Take the first recommendation on improving access: “Support general practice in management of complex chronic disease through blended funding models integrated with fee-for-service…” (my emphasis). There is almost universal agreement in health policy circles that fee-for-service is a relic, ill-suited for modern health challenges. It promotes volume, not value (to patients and taxpayers, that is).
The report has this to say about fee-for-service: “Our primary care system funding mechanisms reward episodic care and fast throughput.” To imply that instead of phasing it out, new payment models will be integrated with it seems rather odd — if not insincere.
The other flaw, however, is what it doesn’t mention. Two important omissions struck me as very strange. The first is taking pressure off health services through better social care, a lack of which results in declining health, especially the sickest and most vulnerable. The result is greater demand on primary and hospital care (and delay their discharge generating bed shortages and ambulance ramping).
Housing, for example, has been shown to reduce demand on health services. Sure, it’s not in the health portfolio, but isn’t silo-thinking part of the reason we need a taskforce (and one of the things it is trying to fix)?
The second omission are private medical specialist services, which make up about a third of Medicare expenditure (yes, a large chunk of “private” healthcare in Australia is taxpayer-funded — through Medicare and the private health insurance rebate). Yet a considerable proportion of these specialist services (tests, imaging, procedures) are unnecessary. It’s inconceivable that an attempt to strengthen Medicare avoids discussing how this waste can be reduced — if not for any other reason than creating more fiscal space for primary care.
But every dollar of expenditure is a dollar of income, and while the doctors’ union, the Australian Medical Association (AMA), may be outwardly critical of the report, in private it will be pleased that (a) medical specialties escaped scrutiny and (b) the scope of the report excludes any suggestion that non-medical factors may play an important role in strengthening Medicare.
Only a brave politician takes on the medical establishment, especially on income. Just ask Nicola Roxon, Nye Bevan … or the government of South Korea circa 2000, where doctors went on strike over a proposed law to prevent them prescribing and dispensing medications (resulting in the loss of a lucrative income stream).
If this government really is fair dinkum about reform, the next instalment of Strengthening Medicare needs to provide a detailed policy framework informed by a panel that is less weighted to commercial interests and more towards those who use, and pay for, the scheme. Otherwise the whole exercise will be another wasted opportunity.
First step would be to dump the private health rebate and redirect that money into Medicare.
The next would be to cap what doctors could charge for a certain service.
medicare is capped you can’t cap everything -otherwise you couldn’t go shopping
every frickin time the government wants to be seen to be “doing” something, they consult the entrenched interests who are benefiting from the status quo and not the poor sods who are paying for and being hurt by the stars quo – the fact that the MSM doesn’t highlight this nonsense just goes to prove they’re complicit
*status – not stars
They certainly do. The Liberals are actually more honest than Labor in that respect, because they openly declare their first concern is the interests of business. Labor makes incoherent noises about a more balanced approach, but at the end of the day still represents the interests of business. As Rundle put it recently, the main difference is that Labor shows more competence implementing neoliberal policy.
It is interesting that the example of “double dipping” in South Korea is used is this article, whilst in the general discussion about reform, allowing Pharmacists to prescribe and dispense, and therefore, “double dip” is frequently mentioned.
It is silly that people are required to go to the GP 2 or 3 times a year to get new prescriptions for medications for their chronic condition.
Surely that’s a case where the pharmacist can redo the prescription – at no cost to the patient or Medicare?
Ditto appointments to renew referrals to specialists which are valid for 12 months. This could easily be extended to 24 months thereby freeing up more access to GPs.
I have an ongoing referral to my specialist, don’t need to ever renew it.
Ask your GP.
Your views are based on the premise that nothing changes in the body – perhaps a more cost effective solution would be for people to be issued with their prescriptions and medications when they go to the doctor – when I go to the pharmacy the pharmacist does not add value in giving me the tablets the doctor has prescribed. I would rather be issued with the tablets directly at the doctors surgery after seeing the doctor and be reassessed and it would save the government billions in dispensing fees.
Stupid statement – how can one get a prescription at no cost to the patient or Medicare – do the drug companies donate medicine these days?
A prescription can be issued at no cost. The medication it describes will cost.
I am a now retired doctor (with relinquished registration) and am on 9 different medications; I have to see my GP at least once a month for script renewals. I am under at least 4 different specialists as well (I’m 79 with multiple diagnoses). I often run into the “withholding” requirement with my local pharmacist as well.
True. But perhaps the politicians and the public should not be so nervous. In 2000 doctors went on strike in Israel. The longer the doctors’ strike continued, the more the death rate fell. In some locations, the death rate dropped by 50%. Unfortunately, the doctors eventually stopped their strike, and the mortality rates returned to normal again. This same thing had happened in Israel in 1983 when the Israel Medical Association applied sanctions for four and a half months. There are other examples. The incidence of iatrogenic illness and death is far higher than people imagine. Seeing a doctor can be beneficial or even necessary; it can also be hazardous.
This is great. Do you have a source?
You’ll find plenty with an internet search based on the following or similar:
what’s iatrogenic ? these days the State help you kill yourself and even funds it – so death is really not a measure of medical treatment.
” Seeing a doctor can be beneficial or even necessary; it can also be hazardous.” -Everything we do is like that , ever driven a car , rode a bicycle, ridden a horse . So driving a car ” can be beneficial, even necessary and it can be hazardous.”
of course the death rate fell, no one was being declared dead.
Thanks Crikey, you seem to have revamped the comments process. That is good – it was woeful. But I’m still getting “nonce is invalid” when I try to enter a comment. I have to refresh the page and do the comment again, before it ‘takes’.
Note also that after pressing the button to chow more comments, the Up and Down arrows fore Likes totally disappear for later posts (after page 1).
It’s a bug.
Except either or both voting arrows are missing in places.
Yes – happens after the “Load More Comments” button.