Skip to content
Government Federal

Catholic Health Australia welcomes public hospital funding boost

Catholic Health Australia 2 mins read

Catholic Health Australia (CHA) has welcomed today’s announcement of a new public hospital funding agreement, including an additional $25 billion in Commonwealth funding over five years to help address growing pressure across the health system.

 

CHA said the commitment represents a significant and necessary step toward strengthening public hospitals as they face rising demand, workforce shortages and increasingly complex care needs.

 

“Public hospitals are under significant and growing pressure, and today’s agreement acknowledges the urgency of the task ahead,” said Dr Katharine Bassett, Director of Health Policy at Catholic Health Australia.

 

“CHA has consistently called for increased public hospital funding to better meet community need, support the workforce, and ensure patients receive timely care. This investment is an important step in the right direction.”

 

CHA particularly welcomed the $2 billion aimed at reducing the number of patients occupying hospital beds while waiting for aged care, investment it had advocated for.

 

“Older Australians stuck in hospital beds because they cannot access aged care is a major system failure that affects patients, families and hospital capacity,” Dr Bassett said.

 

“Addressing this bottleneck is critical to ensuring hospital beds are available for acute care and older Australians receive care that best meets their needs”.

 

CHA is calling on state governments to reduce their burgeoning hospital waitlists by using private hospitals which have excess capacity. 

 

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, Government VIC
  • 30/01/2026
  • 11:50
CHIA Vic

CHIA Vic welcomes launch of HAFF round 3

Victoria’s peak body for community housing has welcomed the opening of the third round of the Housing Australia Future Fund (HAFF), and says local…

  • Contains:
  • Government Federal, Religion
  • 30/01/2026
  • 11:04
Australian National Imams Council (ANIC), the Hind Rajab Foundation (HRF) and the Jewish Council of

UNPRECEDENTED LEGAL CHALLENGE: IMAMS COUNCIL, HIND RAJAB FOUNDATION AND JEWISH COUNCIL DEMAND ARREST OF ISRAELI PRESIDENT ON AUSTRALIAN SOIL

In a historic joint action, the Australian National Imams Council (ANIC), the Hind Rajab Foundation (HRF) and the Jewish Council of Australia, have lodged a formal legal complaint to have Israeli President Isaac Herzog arrested or barred from entering Australia. The groups, represented by renowned barrister Robert Richter KC, allege that Herzog has incited genocide and aided and abetted war crimes, rendering him unfit to enter the country under Australian law. The 30-page submission, sent yesterday to Attorney-General Michelle Rowland, Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke and the Australian Federal Police (AFP), warns that the President’s visit is "highly inflammatory". The…

  • Finance Investment, Government Federal
  • 30/01/2026
  • 08:00
ACOSS

Government spends more on property investor tax breaks than social housing, homelessness services and rent assistance combined

New data shows Australia’s housing and homelessness crisis is worsening, prompting calls to curb property investor tax breaks and build more social homes. The Productivity Commission’s Report on Government Services released today shows that 41% of people waiting to get into public housing are homeless or at risk of homelessness - up from 26% in 2015. Meanwhile, analysis by ACOSS finds the Federal Government is spending more on tax breaks for property investors than on social housing, homelessness services and rent assistance combined. ACOSS calls on the Federal Government to gradually halve the 50% Capital Gains Tax discount and phase…

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.