Anne-Marie Boxall - Deeble Institute for Health & Policy Research, Aus Healthcare &...

Preview:

DESCRIPTION

Anne-Marie Boxall delivered the presentation at the 2014 Future of Medicare Conference. The Future of Medicare Conference was a timely event as the Abbott government debates a full over haul of the Australian healthcare system. This conference presented a chance for government representatives, regulators, health care providers in the public and private sector, educators and private investors to come together and debate the proposed changes to Medicare as well as discuss the best practice methods of implementing new measures and frameworks. For more information about the event, please visit: http://bit.ly/FutureofMedicare2014

Citation preview

UNIVERSAL HEALTH CARE IN

THE 21ST CENTURY

Dr Anne-marie Boxall

Director, Deeble Institute for Health

Policy Research

Australian Healthcare and Hospitals

Association

THE DAWN OF THE 21ST CENTURY

W I N S T ON C H U R C H I L L

“THE FARTHER BACKWARD YOU CAN LOOK, THE FARTHER FORWARD YOU ARE LIKELY TO SEE”

Medibank developed in 1968

Designed to address problems of the day

Access to GPs, medical specialists, and public hospitals

Acute illness and injury

OBJECTIVES OF MEDICARE

THEN AND NOW

Simplicity

“The simpler we make a health scheme the more chance it has of delivering the services to those who need them most”

Affordability

“Everyone will contribute towards the nation’s health costs according to his or her ability to pay”

Universality

“Medicare will provide the same entitlement to basic medical benefits, and treatment in a public hospital to every Australian resident regardless of income”

Efficiency

“Having the maximum number of health dollars spent on delivering health services rather than administering them”

Neal Blewett , Second reading speech, Par l iament 1983

KEY FEATURES OF MEDICARE

Does universal access to health care matter?

Is Medicare still universal?

What can we do about it?

CRITICAL QUESTIONS

DOES UNIVERSAL

HEALTH CARE MATTER?

The WHO says so

All WHO member states (includes Australia) made a commitment to

achieving universal health cover (World Health Assembly, 2005)

The UN explains why (UN General Assembly 2012)

It is the right of every human being to the enjoyment of the highest

attainable standard of physical and mental health

WHY DOES UNIVERSAL CARE MATTER?

IS MEDICARE

UNIVERSAL IN THE 21ST

CENTURY?

Free access to public hospitals remains

Waiting lists for elective surgery can be long PHI have preferential access

Almost 2/3 of all elective surgery in private

hospitals 75% in some speciality areas

Access to private hospitals limited No PHI, or living in rural and remote areas

LIMITS OF UNIVERSALITY - HOSPITALS

Bulk-billing rates for medical services

High for GPs (83%)

Low for medical specialists (28%)

Access to doctors very limited in some

areas

LIMITS OF UNIVERSALITY – MEDICAL

CARE

Jurisdiction Bulk-billing rate (all services, %)

ACT 65.8

WA 71.1

Tas 74.1

Vic 76.6

Qld 77.5

SA 78.1

NT 85.0

TOTAL 77.4Data: Medicare Australia, March 2014 quarter

VARIATION IN BULK-BILLING ACROSS

STATES

GP bulk-billing rates (2010-11 data)

46% Canberra, Fraser (ACT), 57% Curtin

(Perth, WA), 59% Higgins (Melbourne, VIC)

99% Chifley, 98% Fowler, Blaxland (Western

Sydney, NSW)

LOCAL VARIATION

Federal budget 2014-15

$7 co-payment on all previously bulk-billing GP,

pathology and diagnostic imaging services

MBS rebate reduced by $5

Only applies for first 10 visits for concession card holders,

children <16

Low Gap Incentive Payment paid if these people are only

charged $7 co-payment

Possible end of bulk-billing threat to universality

PROPOSED CHANGES TO BULK-BILLING

MEDICARE ≠ HEALTH SYSTEM

Medicare is not the entirety of health system

Insurance scheme that covers medical and hospital services (small range of allied health services)

Many other health programs and initiatives funded through various means

Preserving universal health care cannot rely entirely on Medicare (without radical reform)

WHO FUNDS HEALTH CARE?

Australian

government

43%

State/territory

governments

27%

Health insurance

funds

8%

Individuals

17%

Others

5%

Federal government

E.g. PBS, ACCHOs, mental health services, dental health

State governments

E.g. Community Health Centres, drug and alcohol programs, child health clinics

Private health insurers

Hospital care, some out of hospital and ancillary services, ambulance services

OTHER PROGRAMS AND INITIATIVES

AUSTRALIAN GOVERNMENT FUNDING

MBS/PBS, 35.6Payments to

states, 15.1

Rebates for PHI,

4.7DVA,

3.6

Medical

expenses

rebate, 0.5

($billion), 2011

MBS/PBS

Payments to states

Rebates for PHI

DVA

Medical expenses

rebate

Universality of Medicare being eroded but

need to look beyond Medicare to solve the

problem

Two longstanding problems undermining

universality

Fragmented financing arrangements thwarts quality care for

chronic disease

Mixed public-private health insurance with unclear roles

ADDRESSING PROBLEM OF UNIVERSAL

CARE

Medicare established alongside PHI scheme

Voluntary PHI scheme in place since 1950s

Medibank layered on top in 1975 – mixed public/private insurance model

Various experiments with balancing mixed system

Today - Medicare is universal, but 47% also have private insurance

Structure of our mixed system a problem that needs addressing

UNIVERSAL INSURANCE + PRIVATE

INSURANCE

Private insurance covers some of the same services as Medicare (duplicative insurance) Hospital treatment

Some allied health services

Private insurance covers some additional services and benefits (supplementary insurance) Dental services, optical products

Additional allied health cover

Medical specialist fees in private hospital

Private insurance cannot cover some Medicare services GPs

ROLES FOR PHI IN AUSTRALIA

THE ROLE

OF PHI IN

VARIOUS

OECD

COUNTRIES

S OURC E : OE C D

H E A LT H AT A

G L A N C E , 2 01 3

Large duplication between Medicare and private

insurance has never been addressed

Duplication means people with PHI sometimes

have: Faster access to health care

Access to a wider range of services

….sometimes they also have higher out of pocket costs

While some people have privileged access,

universality is being eroded

PROBLEMS WITH DUPLICATION

WHAT CAN WE DO TO

MAINTAIN UNIVERSAL

ACCESS?

Universal access being eroded because haven’t tackled longstanding problems

Not easy public policy problems to solve

Tendency to look at small-scale financing solutions (co-payments and safety nets)

Should we consider larger-scale structural reforms? They are always contentious

Little detailed policy analysis/modelling underway

CAN WE FIX IT?

Clarifying role of PHI Limiting role to covering optional extras (no govt subsidies)

Opt-out system where Medicare and PHI compete (must cover

primary health care)

Alternative health system models Allow people to cash-out government benefits and control own

funds (Medical Saving Accounts)

Allow third-party to control funds and manage care (Health

Maintenance Organisations)

SOME OPTIONS

We don’t have a clean slate to work with

Medibank and Medicare built on existing system (FFS, insurance model and strong private sector)

Future reforms will be strongly informed by current arrangements

Reform is not easy

Labor’s long campaign for Medibank

Helps to have well developed policy proposal

Failure is often a stepping stone to success

Medibank dismantled but paved way for Medicare

New policy proposals often pragmatic solutions to problems

Medicare contested ALP policy

Bipartisan support (publicly), ideological positions harder to determine

PROSPECTS OF REFORM: LESSONS FROM

HISTORY

Our health system increasingly not meeting its

objective of providing universal access to health

care

Need for reform, but problem not just Medicare

Thinking about reforms in infancy and analysis

limited

‘In a society as wealthy as ours there should not be people putting

off treatment because they cannot afford the bills. Basic health

care should be the right of every Australian’

Neal Blewett, 1984

CONCLUSION

Contact details

Dr Anne-marie Boxall

Director, Deeble Institute for Health Policy Research

Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association

E: aboxall@ahha.asn.au

QUESTIONS?

Recommended