The Australian Medical Association (AMA) continued its tradition of opposing key health reforms when its federal council voted last week to oppose the establishment of Medicare Locals.
Just as in the early 1980s it opposed the introduction of Medicare and in the 1940s argued that the proposed Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) represented a dangerous slide into socialism.
Thanks to these programs, Australians now have access to universal health care and some of the cheapest medicines in the developed world.
Had the governments of the day bowed to pressure from the AMA and scrapped those planned reforms, we may well have ended up with a health system such as the US’s, which costs more than double that of Australia’s and delivers poorer health outcomes.
Luckily for the Australian community, the health ministers at the time were able to resist pressure from the AMA’s scare campaigns and propaganda machine.
They pushed ahead with the introduction of these health programs, which greatly benefited the Australian community and that are the envy of many other countries today.
Even the AMA eventually agreed that perhaps there were some benefits to publicly subsidised health care. It’s hard to find an AMA spokesperson today who will publicly advocate the abolition of these programs.
Similarly, the objection to Medicare Locals (MLs) is likely to turn out to be short-term paranoia about doctors losing control over the health agenda rather than substantial objections to the detail of the ML initiative.
The fact that there is strong support for MLs among many other health groups — including some representing GPs — demonstrates how isolated the AMA is on this issue.
In fact, the main concerns of other health groups about MLs are precisely the opposite of the AMA’s. They are worried that they will simply entrench the power of the medical profession in the primary care sector and fail in their stated aim to support better integrated and co-ordinated primary care.
For example, the Royal College of Nursing Australia recently wrote to all political leaders describing Medicare Locals as “a reconfiguration and rebranding of the Divisions of General Practice” and stating that it was “unconvinced that divisions would be able … to achieve the organisational cultures and attitudes required … to genuinely and effectively co-ordinate multidisciplinary health care”.
You don’t have to be Machiavelli to see that this tactfully worded letter is code for “don’t let the doctors take over”.
The fact that the AMA is opposing Medicare Locals for not being doctor-focused enough and other health professional groups are concerned that they are too doctor-centric, shows how tricky this area of health policy can be. It also is good evidence that the government has probably made the right judgment about how far to push the reform agenda, at least from a political perspective.
The political juggling act needed now is to progress the needed changes without getting the AMA offside to the point that it undermines the reform process while also not alienating other health professional groups by bowing to AMA pressure to maintain medical control over primary care budgets.
It’s a difficult challenge but Nicola Roxon and her colleagues should take heart from the lessons of the past that it is possible — and indeed sometimes necessary — to deliver major health reform in the face of resistance from the AMA.
In fact, looking at the public support and longevity of Medicare and the PBS, it could be argued that the AMA’s opposition to a proposed health reform is a good predictor of its success.
On this basis, it’s likely that one day the AMA will come around to supporting MLs, just as they did with Medicare and the PBS.
It might just take them a little longer than the rest of the community.
*Jennifer Doggett is a health policy analyst.
The AMA was so used to getting its own way, when Abbott was health Minister, now that there is a Govt and a health Minister, who are getting on with reforming the system, they bleat like lost sheep. Why were they not making similar noises when Abbott ripped 50 million from Health during his inglorious tenure?
Didn’t the AMA have a lot to do with cutting back on numbers training to be doctors? They didn’t want too many to share their ‘spoils’ with? Now look at the mess we’re in re not enough GP’s to care for all patients. A few years ago about 3 doctors left in less months. It was almost impossible for new patients to be put ‘on the books’? I personally was party to at least one incident, where the woman had been to every general practice in the area – she was desperate and was kindly told to go to the A&E at the major hospital – about 30 minutes away.
The medical profession have too much influence and should be given the message – go away and let us get on with what’s necessary for peoples’ health needs!
The Feds need to get the AMA apparatchiks out of NSW Health for any real reform to take place.
They can slow and ultimately destroy any plan that has a positive outcome for the consumer, especially if that consumer is part of the majority.
Now that billions have been wasted on 1% of the population, (with the bulk of the remainder of the states budget directed to some women’s health, including the “Men’s Health – Who Cares” Posters), it may be time to look at the whole health picture, without the benefit of the AMA state bureaucracy and without the scandalous waste at the expense of the majority and consider the other 99% of the population.
The GP focus is a good start but the school based nurse doing the checks and injections on the kids and their siblings, pre and post natal follow ups on the mums and primary contact for the grandparents really brings community health back to the majority of the community, instead of some of the community.
“is likely to turn out to be short-term paranoia about doctors losing control over the health agenda”
Well, it’s not like they have done a bang-up job now, is it. Many of the problems in the health system are caused by doctors believing that they have all the answers … to everything …. all the time.
Would you be happy if your car was designed and built by the local garage mechanic? Or your office block designed by the guy who digs the foundations?
AMA isn’t that a “Dog Patch” acronym for “Li’l Liberals”?
And what about (Wooldridge’s “study”) capping/protecting numbers – the way that protected incomes?