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Government NSW, Medical Health Aged Care

$8.5B GOVERNMENT COMMITMENT TO REFORM MEDICARE

ForHealth 2 mins read

Date 23 February 2025

MEDIA RELEASE

$8.5B GOVERNMENT COMMITMENT TO REFORM MEDICARE

ForHealth Group, the largest bulk-billing General Practice provider in Australia serving more than 8 million patient visits annually, commends the $8.5b Government commitment and Opposition support to reform Medicare, including:

  • Expanded eligibility for the bulk-billing incentive rebate currently only available to children and Healthcare Card holders for all Australians.
  • A new 12.5% loading payment on rebates for practices that only bulk-bill
  • A significant expansion of the GP trainee program and nurse scholarships for locally trained workforce. 

Implementation of this commitment underpins our universal healthcare system and will build GP workforce and protect and encourage a return to the bulk-billing system.
We expect a material increase in bulk-billed visits back to historical levels as a result.

ForHealth welcomes the matched commitment by the Opposition and bi-partisan support for sector investment and reform to the benefit of all Australians.

ForHealth CEO Andrew Cohen said:

“This commitment now has bi-partisan support and represents a vote-of-confidence in Medicare and the primary healthcare sector. The magnitude of this investment has been what the primary care sector has been calling for to enable true reform.

"Bulk-billing will now be financially sustainable for both the GP practitioners and for the health care clinic.

 

"This would be a vital change to the vulnerable outer metropolitan and regional communities we operate in, where cost-of-living pressures and private fees are impacting essential visits to the GP. This is a great outcome for the health of all Australians.

"It will lead to investment in more practices, better distribution of practices and GPs, longer hours of operation, and more local graduates committing to General Practice as a pathway." 

ForHealth Clinical Director Dr Carolyn Roesler said:

“I have worked in Elizabeth in South Australia, a lowest decile socioeconomic community, for more than 25 years. I am also on the Board of the Northern Adelaide Local Health Network (NAHLAN) which overseas hospitals and community health in the area.

"Private gap fees are now commonplace in our area, because rebates are considered too low unless the patient has a Healthcare Card. GP workforce is also very low, half the level of inner metropolitan areas, because the community has a limited capacity to pay for private fees. 

"I am confident that the proposed changes will fundamentally change health access in Elizabeth, attracting new doctors, ensure Bulk Billing for all and make private fees the exception and not the rule." 

END COMMUNICATION

 

For enquiries, please contact Chis Paterson, Head of Regulatory Affairs, +61 437 325 156.

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