Skip to content
Government Federal, Medical Health Aged Care

AGPA Calls for Medicare Independent Pricing Authority

Australian GP Alliance 3 mins read

The Australian General Practice Alliance (AGPA) today called for a major overhaul of Medicare including the establishment of an independent pricing authority to set the levels of Medicare rebates. 

“Medicare is no longer fit for purpose with successive Labor and Coalition Governments starving funding to the point where primary healthcare for Australians is seriously jeopardized” said Dr Mukesh Haikerwal, Deputy Chair of the AGPA when commenting on the landmark RACGP Health of the Nation 2024 Report.

“With over 7000 General Practices in Australia, over 75% of them report that their major concerns are rising business costs, declining business profitability and sourcing and retaining GPs. All of these are directly related to underfunding of Medicare commencing with the Labor and Coalition freezes on rebate increases under the Gillard / Rudd/ Abbot and Turnbull Governments, and below medical inflation increases to an already depleted rebate under the Morrison and current Albanese Governments” he said.

“Practices are generally small privately owned businesses and their viability is a critical part of our entire healthcare system, providing the essential support services where Australians can see a GP, nurses and other health professionals. The proportion of patients delaying or not accessing healthcare has doubled as rising costs and underfunding of rebates have forced GPs into private billing. This raises the red-flag of worse outcomes as early diagnosis and treatment brings better results for patients”

“When Medicare was first introduced the promise was access to affordable universal health care and the rebate was 85% of the “schedule fee” which was close to the actual cost of providing services. The “schedule fee” has been eroded in value and the rebate for Australian Citizens towards their health care costs has been gutted and is now closer to 45%. The costs of providing services sees over 35% of GPs forced to charge over $90 for a consultation. One third of GPs are planning to cease practicing in the next five years, many are reducing hours available and the specialty is not attracting enough graduates to replace them”.

“All of these factors indicate the disaster facing Australians being able to access the excellent GP-led care they are used to and deserve – amongst the best performing health systems in the world. Using other workers to perform single tasks fragments care and near enough is not good enough for our health. Today’s holistic care takes intense life-long learning and skill” Dr Haikerwal said.

“While there are also other factors such as the compliance and regulatory burden, the single factor having the greatest impact is inadequate funding”.

“Successive governments have shown that they cannot be trusted with funding the primary healthcare of Australians.  There needs to be an innovative approach, with ambition to improve the system, consistency and long-term systemic thinking.  It is now time to commence major reforms – starting with an independent pricing authority to set appropriate levels for the Medicare rebate”, Dr Haikerwal said.

Ends             

 


Key Facts:

 Over 7000 General Practices in Australia, more than 75% of them report that their major concerns are rising business costs, declining business profitability and sourcing and retaining GPs.

The costs of providing services sees over 35% of GPs forced to charge over $90 for a consultation. 

 


About us:

he Australian GP Alliance (AGPA) represents the interests of GP Practice Owners, addressing issues faced by Principal-led General Practices.

The Australian model of GP owned private general practice has been responsible for our international reputation as an efficient and highly effective primary health care service.

The continuation of high quality primary healthcare in Australia is dependent on the continued viability of the Practices that provide the leadership and infrastructure that allows GPs to practice, and patients to access the healthcare system.


Contact details:

Dr Mukesh Haikerwal, Deputy Chair AGPA, 0407 599 332

AGPA Secretariat 02 6290 1505

Media

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 10/10/2024
  • 13:57
Royal Australian College of GPs

Miles Government’s commitment to make pharmacy pilots permanent dangerous for Queenslanders: RACGP

The Queensland Government’s election commitment to make its pharmacy pilots permanent despite numerous cases of misdiagnosis and incorrect treatment and without a clinical evaluation is a serious risk to Queenslander's health, the Royal Australian College of GPsis warning. The Miles Labor Government announced today that it will make both the Community Pharmacy Scope of Practice Pilot and the Pharmacy Hormonal Contraception Pilot permanent if elected this month. RACGP Queensland spokesperson Dr Bruce Willett slammed the move as dangerous. “The Miles Government is putting politics before the health and wellbeing of Queenslanders, and I strongly urge other parties not to follow…

  • Education Training, Government Federal
  • 10/10/2024
  • 13:31
Independent Tertiary Education Council Australia (ITECA)

Senate Splits On International Education Bill

Independent skills training and higher education providers delivering quality outcomes to international students express deep concern over the lack of clear direction in the Senate’s review of the Education Services for Overseas Students Amendment (Quality and Integrity) Bill 2024. The Independent Tertiary Education Council Australia (ITECA) says many members face a threat to their existence if the Bill passes in its current form and the Australian Government uses its newfound draconian powers without appropriate guardrails and oversight. “There’s no doubt that this legislation will be disastrous for independent skills training and higher education providers, as well as Australia’s reputation as…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 10/10/2024
  • 13:03
La Trobe University

What it means when your knees creak

La Trobe researchers have discovered that almost half the population has “creaky knees” in a study investigating how common the problem is and what it means for the health of our knees.Knee crepitus, the audible crackling or grinding noise during knee movement, is common across all age groups but does not always reflect underlying knee problems. La Trobe graduate researcher and physiotherapist Jamon Couch said people with creaky knees often felt there were more serious underlying health issues like arthritis, causing them to be fearful of exercising and using their knees. “Health professionals often find it challenging to provide advice…

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.