Skip to content
CharitiesAidWelfare, Medical Health Aged Care

Calls for rural health care equity as Medicare celebrates 40 years

National Rural Health Alliance 2 mins read

As Australia marks 40 years of Medicare, the National Rural Health Alliance (the Alliance), in recognising the benefits of Medicare, takes the opportunity to call for improvements in the funding models for primary health to ensure that those who live and work in rural, regional and remote areas benefit from the scheme in the same way as their city counterparts.

When established, Medicare was intended to ensure the public had access to primary health care at little or no cost to keep them healthier and out of the more expensive hospital system.

With the benefit of 40 years of hindsight and now projecting into the future, Medicare needs to build in other measures to ensure geographic equity and meet the health challenges of an aging population living with increased rates of chronic disease.

“The Alliance calls for support to multidisciplinary healthcare teams through Medicare. Funding is needed outside of the fee-for-service model for rural communities, particularly in thin rural and remote markets that increasingly find it difficult to survive under the current MBS funding arrangements. A more innovative model of care is needed for those in rural areas,” said National Rural Health Alliance Chairperson Nicole O’Reilly.

“We know primary health care works. Having access to primary health care at little or no cost to patients keeps them healthier and out of the more expensive hospital system. 

“As technological advances, including the use of artificial intelligence increases, we need to ensure that people living in rural Australia benefit equitably from it. They should be able to access the healthcare they need from their local primary healthcare providers and high-quality acute care when they need it as close to home as possible.

“Medicare relies on having providers available to deliver the services. There is inequity where people in rural and remote Australia do not have access to the same level of Medicare supported health care as their city counterparts due to the tyranny of distance and limited healthcare workforce availability,” concluded Ms O’Reilly.


About us:

The National Rural Health Alliance (the Alliance) comprises 50 national organisations committed to improving the health and wellbeing of the 7 million people in rural and remote Australia. Our diverse membership includes representation from the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health sector, health professional organisations, health service providers, health educators and students.


Contact details:

Kathya de Silva, Media and Communications Officer, National Rural Health Alliance, 0470 487 608

Media

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 23/10/2024
  • 14:43
Dementia Australia

Dementia Australia supports Bridgetown & Nannup

Are you concerned about your memory or worried that someone you know may have dementia? Dementia Australia is offering support in Bridgetown and Nannup between 6 and 8 November. It is estimated there are more than 40,500 people living with all forms of dementia in Western Australia. Without a medical breakthrough this number is expected to increase to almost 87,000 people living with dementia by 2054. These Dementia Australia sessions are an opportunity for people living with dementia, their carers, family, and friends to attend free education to better understand dementia and to discuss the support and services Dementia Australia…

  • Contains:
  • COVID19, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 23/10/2024
  • 08:55
PSS Distributors

Failed Vaccines Put Thousands of Aussie Lives at Risk and Cost the Government $22 Million in Wastage

The eye-watering cost of vaccine wastage and the serious public health threat posed by compromised vaccines already given to Australians are making headlines across major news outlets right now, underscoring the need for urgent action. The national press reported last week that over 1,200 patients at a general practice in Sydney’s inner west – including hundreds of children receiving their first vaccinations under the age of five –were informed that the vaccines they received between December 2019 and July 2024 may not be fully effective due to improper storage, leaving them prone to serious diseases like polio, hepatitis, meals, whooping…

  • Medical Health Aged Care, Political
  • 23/10/2024
  • 06:45
Public Health Association of Australia / Royal Australasian College of Physicians (RACP) /

Action on Australian Centre for Disease Control now more urgent than ever: health experts

23 October 2024: Leading Australian health experts have joined together today to call for the Government to urgently commit funds to establish a permanent Australian Centre for Disease Control (Australian CDC), saying that the Government’s election promise to create the organisation is now more pressing than ever. The call comes in the lead-up to the revised deadline for the delivery of the COVID-19 Inquiry Response Report (now due October 25), which the Government has said will help determine the Australian CDC’s future structure and function. It also comes in the wake of the retirement of the Interim CDC’s Head, Professor…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.