Doctors urge government to reform outdated Medicare system, warns quality health care may become inaccessible to millions of Australians
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Medical practitioners are calling on the government to reform Medicare's current funding model, claiming that the system poses a threat to bulk billing and other GP services which could subsequently make quality health care inaccessible in the country.
It was said that in many cases, GPs were forced to adjust the cost of their labour just to keep their services accessible to many Australians who are in need of medical support.
Royal Australian College of GPs president Dr Karen Price said that GPs are being forced to make sacrifices just to keep their services affordable.
“If this keeps going, we’re going to have a two-tier health system,” she said.
Medical practitioners said that the outdated Medicare funding system should be reformed to keep up with the changing times. Credit: news.com.au.
Dr Price disclosed that the current Medicare rebate is just $39.10 for 20 minutes of a doctor’s time.
She explained that the low rebate rates have prompted many GPs to reduce their bulk billing hours out of concern for the sustainability of their businesses.
Dr Price quipped: “The Medicare rebate has not kept pace with the costs of running a practice in terms of staffing costs, equipment and so forth.”
“Up until now, many of us have been subsidising the gap ourselves, particularly for vulnerable patients.”
The Australian Medical Association (AMA) is also campaigning for the reforms, emphasising that Medicare's funding system should keep up with the current times.
It should be noted that the current model was launched in the 80s and has not been changed since.
AMA president Dr Omar Khorshid urged the government to recognise the struggles that Australian GPs experience to provide quality health care to people.
He said: “Doctors working in general practice have been forced time and time again to wear the brunt of these real cuts to Medicare.”
“The health care needs of patients have become much more complex as the population has aged, yet Medicare is stuck in the 1980s.”
Medical practitioners also claimed that patients who are seeking long-term care may not benefit much from Medicare due to its inadequate funding.
Dr Price explained: “Vulnerable patients, in particular, have often long and complex medical conditions, often multiple medical conditions.”
“The Medicare rebate is really only designed for acute, high-volume care, so detailed holistic care is not well supported by Medicare.”
This means that pensioners who are in need of long-term health support will be adversely affected if Medicare does not reform its model.
The current Medicare funding is inadequate to support Australians who are in need of long-term care, the experts said. Credit: NCA Newswire/Christian Gilles.
Experts also revealed that while the government claims that bulk billing levels are at a record high, their analysis showed that the claim was a case of data misrepresentation.
GP bulk billing rates were at around 88.4 per cent in last year’s December 2021 quarter – 0.3 per cent higher than the December 2020 quarter and 6.4 per cent higher than the same period in 2012.
Dr Price said: “Bulk billing rates have gone up, but some of that is a bit tricky. Obviously with Covid and mandated bulk billing for vaccinations and for some of the earlier parts of telehealth, that distorted some of those figures.”
Additionally, the figures released by the government only accounted for the bulk billing "activities" rather than "per patient" records.
“So our numbers and the Productivity Commission’s numbers are somewhere around 67-70 per cent or so of people are bulk billed,” she said.
Dr Price also disclosed that the general practice industry is facing a shortage as many medical school graduates opt to go into hospital practice.
It was said that only 15 per cent of the graduates choose general practice due to financial uncertainty as opposed to hospital practice where they could get a more sustainable stream of income.
“At the moment it seems when there is an announcement on health, it’s always in a hospital. It doesn’t seem to be popular to say that most health care occurs in the community,” she said.
The shortage means that health care could become inaccessible in rural and remote and outer suburban areas.
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