Skip to content
Government Federal

Regional health and aged care need more funding: Catholic Health Australia

Catholic Health Australia 3 mins read

Catholic Health Australia (CHA) is calling for reforms to sustain and improve vital hospital and aged care services and patient care for the millions of people living in rural and remote Australia.

“Due to smaller patient volumes and higher costs, regional and remote hospital and aged care services are under the most severe pressures, including financial and workforce,” said CHA CEO Jason Kara.

“We want to ensure the one in three Australians who live outside a capital city have the same choice, access and quality of care as everyone else.” 

In its budget submissions on health and aged care, CHA supports the government’s proposal to increase default benefits - the minimum insurers must pay for a treatment - for non-metropolitan hospitals.

CHA is also calling for the introduction of a default benefit for hospital-in-the-home services such as end-of-life care and dialysis, which polling demonstrates 87 per cent of Australians support.

“Default benefits are particularly important in regional areas where services are limited. Increasing them would help put services on a sustainable footing,” said Mr Kara.

“Right now many regional and rural patients are travelling long distances for care they could have in the comfort of their homes if only their insurers funded it. A default benefit for hospital-in-the-home care would shift decision making away from insurers and empower patients and their doctors to decide where they receive their care.”

Access to aged care remains a critical issue in regional, rural, and remote areas. CHA is urging the government to invest in capital funding to ensure older Australians, regardless of where they live, can access safe and high-quality care.

“After years of losses, services simply don’t have the money to expand, upgrade, or refurbish to meet growing demand. The government must boost investment in capital to fund crucial infrastructure upgrades and builds, such as staff accommodation, to ensure viability of services in regional, rural and remote areas.”

Aged care services in mining towns such as Broken Hill and Kalgoorlie are at substantial risk as they receive a low geographic weighting for funding despite their remote status due to an antiquated quirk in the system.

The funding model, called the Modified Monash Model, does not accurately reflect the high cost of service provision in mining towns. CHA is calling on the government to change the categorisation for these communities to ensure aged care providers can continue to operate sustainably.

“The current funding model does not account for the unique economic conditions in regional mining towns,” Mr Kara said. “Providers in these areas are struggling with extreme cost pressures, and without targeted support, aged care services may be forced to close, leaving older residents without local care options.”

In its submissions, CHA is also calling on the government to:

  • lift default benefits from 85 per cent to 100 per cent for hospitals in Rural, Remote and Metropolitan Area
  • use private hospital capacity to treat public patients on long waitlists
  • subsidise wage growth in private hospitals
  • increase funding to services in rural and remote mining towns like Broken Hill and Kalgoorlie with high costs
  • fund and deliver enough aged care packages to meet demand

Notes to editors: Catholic Health Australia (CHA) is Australia’s largest non-government, not-for-profit group of health, community, and aged care providers. Our members operate 80 hospitals in each Australian state and the ACT, providing around 30 per cent of private hospital care and 5 per cent of public hospital care, in addition to extensive community and residential aged care. There are 63 private hospitals operated by CHA members, including St Vincent's, Calvary, Mater, St John of God and Cabrini. CHA members also provide approximately 12 per cent of all aged care facilities across Australia, in addition to around 20 per cent of home care services. 25 per cent of our members’ service provision is regional, rural and remote.

 


Contact details:

Charlie Moore: 0452 606 171

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 18/12/2025
  • 10:20
Hepatitis Australia

Hepatitis Australia welcomes federal funding to continue progress toward eliminating viral hepatitis

Hepatitis Australia has today welcomed the Australian Government’s investment in viral hepatitis prevention, testing and treatment measures and community-led initiatives announced in the Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO). The national Hepatitis peak said that the additional funding comes at a critical moment in Australia’s push to eliminate hepatitis B and hepatitis C by 2030 and will help prevent avoidable illness, liver cancer and deaths. Hepatitis Australia CEO Lucy Clynes said that the MYEFO funding commitment demonstrated that the Australian Government recognises what is at stake. “This funding announcement is good news for nearly 300,000 Australians living with viral hepatitis,…

  • Government Federal, Mental Health
  • 17/12/2025
  • 17:05
Australians for Mental Health

Australians for Mental Health welcomes mental health spend in mid-year budget update

Australians for Mental Health welcomes mental health spend in mid-year budget update Australians for Mental Health has welcomed the federal government’s decision to fund its election commitment of more than $1 billion for mental health care. The Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook released today confirms the mental health funding boosts, which will expand services and provide a boost to the workforce. The funding includes $500 million spent on a new network for 20 Youth Specialist Care Centres, $267.3 million for 32 new and upgraded Medicare Mental Health Centres, $225.3 million for 58 new, upgraded or expanded Headspace services and $83.9…

  • Government Federal, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 16/12/2025
  • 11:27
Australian College of Nursing

ACN urges community healing in wake of the Bondi tragedy

Addressing the General Meeting of the Australian College of Nursing (ACN) Board in Canberra today, ACN President Kath Stein FACN offered condolences to all victims of the tragic terror event at Bondi Beach on Sunday evening. Ms Stein said Australia’s nurses support the families of all those affected by the shooting and its aftermath and stand with Australia’s Jewish community during this period of grieving and recovery. “On behalf of theACN Board and our members, I praise the nurses and their colleagues who are working around the clock caring for the innocent victims and the first responders who were injured…

  • Contains:

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.