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Australia and NHI: Lessons - but no wizardry - from Oz

Australia and NHI: Lessons - but no wizardry - from Oz. Gavin Mooney Universities of Sydney, Cape Town, Southern Denmark, New South Wales and Aarhus. G’Day !. Overview. Federal system Funding by both Federal (Commonwealth) Government and the States but C’wealth more.

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Australia and NHI: Lessons - but no wizardry - from Oz

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  1. Australia and NHI:Lessons - but no wizardry - from Oz Gavin Mooney Universities of Sydney, Cape Town, Southern Denmark, New South Wales and Aarhus

  2. G’Day!

  3. Overview • Federal system • Funding by both Federal (Commonwealth) Government and the States but C’wealth more. • Provision by both Commonwealth and States but States more. • Overall poor logic on who pays, who runs and who has responsibility

  4. Total Spend Getting on for 10.0% of GDP - and been rising

  5. Breakdown of Total Spend • 70.7 % Government (44.2% C’wealth; States 26.5%) • 7.6% Private insurance • 16.8% Out of pocket (private individuals) • 4.9% Other

  6. Who Provides What? • Federal government funds universal medical services and pharmaceuticals; financial assistance to public hospitals, residential care facilities and elderly home and community care. • State governments provide most acute and psychiatric hospital services; community and public health services such as school health and dental health • Local government mainly environmental health

  7. Public Financing • Primarily (82%) from general taxation • But (18%) from ‘Medicare levy’, with level of contributions based on income

  8. Private Sector • Exists more or less happily alongside public system • Provides about 1/3 of all hospital beds • Private insurance 7.6% of total health expenditure in 2008-9. • June 2011 44.3% of population had private health insurance

  9. PHI Premiums • Community rated i.e. ‘non-discriminatory’ • Lifetime health coverage • Most often not full coverage – hence “gap”

  10. Private Health Insurance Rebate • Tax rebates paid on PHI premiums • Levels of rebates: 30% general population; 35% 65-69 years old; 40% over 70 years • Rebate costs taxpayer $4.5 billion per annum

  11. History of Medicare (NHI) • Originally “Medibank” introduced 1st July 1975 as a result of unhappiness with existing voluntary health insurance scheme. • To provide ‘the most equitable and efficient means of providing health insurance coverage for all Australians’. • Political shuffling to 1 February 1984; then Medicare

  12. Dr Neale Blewett on Medicare • ‘A major social reform’ • ‘A health insurance system that is simple, fair and affordable’ • Provides ‘universality of cover’ which is ‘desirable from an equity point of view’ and ‘in terms of efficiency and administrative costs’.

  13. 1984 to 2011 • Some fiddling on benefits side • Some fiddling on costs side • But now accepted by all major political parties • Part of the social fabric of Australia

  14. Medicare: Great but Could Be a Lot Better! • Careful in drawing messages for RSA • Health and health care systems are or should be cultural phenomena • So yes learn but do it the South African way

  15. Some Thoughts from Australia System makes it very difficult • To set priorities • To achieve equity • To get debate on principles

  16. What Do We Get? Many of the problems of not having a single funder • Lack of priority setting and hence inefficiency • Lack of concern with equity and hence inequities exist, especially geographically • Silly debate on who should pay, cost shifting and blame shifting

  17. Who Sets Priorities in Australia? • Not clear that they are set - at least not explicitly • Largely done by some form of osmosis behind closed doors, with shroud waving and loud shouting, usually by blokes in white coats • Emphasis very much on hospitals with continuing neglect of equity, community care, prevention and mental health

  18. Priorities of Informed Citizens • Equity • Community care and prevention • Mental health • (To pay for these extras? Close hospital beds!)

  19. Primary Health Care I Dominated by GPs Dominated by FFS for GPs Hence • not into health • not into population health • not into prevention • not into equity • not into multi-disciplinary care

  20. Primary Health Care II • Patient payments are for many unaffordable • Undermines Medicare’s claim to provide equal access for all

  21. Aboriginal Health I • Medicare has failed Aboriginal people • Gap in life expectancy 11+ years • Policy based on horizontal but not vertical equity (i.e. only limited +ve discrimination) • Institutional racism • Lack of cultural security • Too little spending and major gaps in services • SDH crucial but largely ignored

  22. Aboriginal Health II Basic problem • White fellahs have been telling black fellahs what’s good for them for over 200 years. • And we are still doing it!

  23. Private Health Insurance Rebate • Costs $4.5 billion per annum • Does very little for health care or health • Largely transfer of monies from general taxation to the well off - hence seriously regressive • Money better spent in public hospitals

  24. Hospital Cost Control • DRG or “case mix” funding ‘to drive efficiency’ • Assumption behind this is that what hospitals are trying to maxmise is cost weighted cases. • (Much better to use clinical budgeting for priority setting and try to maximise health)

  25. Other Points • Watch demand led services • Keep patient payments to a minimum • Multiple funders lead to multiple problems • Get the critically informed citizens involved

  26. The Buts of Oz Medicare • Much to defend and admire in Medicare • Difficult to contemplate Australia without it • Does deliver according to key principles of NHI • BUT....

  27. Principles • Universal but... • Equitable but ... • Efficient but ... • Costly? no but ...

  28. BUT Medicare Matters to Australians • There are problems and eccentricities of the Australian system. • BUT Medicare is now part of the Australian social fabric. • A major social institution • It aint perfect but ...

  29. Thanks for listening! g.mooney@westnet.com.au

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