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Medical Health Aged Care

VIC Budget again ignores proven ways to prevent people getting sick: public health peak body

Public Health Association of Australia 2 mins read

Media release

6 May 2026

The Victorian Government’s 2026-27 Budget allocates a record $32 billion to health, including $3.9 billion in new investment, with the overwhelming share directed to hospitals, emergency departments, and specialist care.

While there are welcome investments, such as $10m for women’s preventive sexual health support, these remain relatively small in scale when viewed against overall health expenditure, the Public Health Association of Australia’s VIC Branch said.

“Health is shaped by the social, cultural, economic, and environmental conditions in which people live,” PHAA VIC Branch President, Mariam Hachem, said.

“The Victorian Government’s ongoing investment in health services and efforts to improve access to care does not go unnoticed.

“However, consistent with last year’s budget, this year’s continues to prioritise downstream and crisis responses over early intervention and preventive measures that are more effective, equitable, and cost efficient in the long term.

“Without sustained, scaled, and protected investment in preventive health at its core, Victoria risks perpetuating a system that reacts to illness late which incurs added costs, rather than reducing demand, improving equity, and ensuring long-term system sustainability.”

The PHAA VIC Branch has today unveiled its priorities for all parties contesting the November election. It encourages all candidates to consider actions which will stop people in Victoria from getting sick:

1. Increase prevention funding to 5% of the state’s overall health budget

2. Establish and fund a Victorian-specific Public Health Officer Training Program

3. Guarantee five years’ funding to maintain and consolidate the role of Local Public Health Units

4. Maintain the independence and full funding of VicHealth


“Taking prevention seriously eases the pressures on our hospitals and ambulance services, and means Victorians can live longer and healthier, and have a better quality of life,” Ms Hachem said.

 

For further information/comment:

Dr Stephen Owen, PHAA Communications Officer, 0400 169 787, [email protected]

 


About us:

We’re Australia's peak body for public health and advocate for the health and wellbeing of everyone. We strive to help prevent – rather than cure – illness and disease. We represent around 2,000 individual members from more than 40 professional groups interested in the promotion of public health. We have branches in every state and territory. https://www.phaa.net.au/


Contact details:

Dr Stephen Owen, PHAA Communications Officer, 0400 169 787, [email protected]

 

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