Budget Night was on Tuesday 13th May, 2014 and the fuss has still not settled by a long shot.
Here are some of the more interesting articles I have spotted this seventh week since it was released.
It was interesting to see the AMA President continue come out so strongly against the co-payment. Does not bode well for success in the Senate when it changes on July 1. The level of comment on this issue is also seemingly unending.
Listening to the political conversation last week it seems like very little of the Government’s agenda has an assured passage through the Senate any time soon!
What we are also seeing is DoH and indeed much of the Government flailing about - quite unclear on a number of fronts just what is coming next. Every day it seems to look more like a chook raffle! The first headline below says it all! Best I have seen in a good while.
We sure do live in interesting times!
We sure do live in interesting times!
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General.
Govt 'charm' will get budget passed: Pyne
- July 04, 2014
CHARM - that's how the Abbott government will get its controversial budget through the new Senate.
EDUCATION Minister Christopher Pyne reckons the government will get its agenda passed despite the concerns of key crossbenchers.
"I'm quietly confident that given the charm of members of the government - and the obvious excellence of our program - that we will get most of our program through," Mr Pyne told the Nine Network on Friday.
The government needs the votes of six out of eight crossbenchers, with the Palmer United Party's voting bloc of four key to success.
Negotiations with the new senators have begun in earnest as they prepare to take up their seats in the upper house on Monday.
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Tony Abbott and his fading $25 billion sales pitch
Phillip Coorey
Outside the Senate entrance on Friday morning in sub-zero temperatures, Palmer United Party Senator Dio Wang found himself being grilled over the big issue. Did he, too, think Tony Abbott was a psychopath?
“Not my choice of words,” said Wang, or words to that effect as he politely dissociated himself with the rambling attack on the Prime Minister the day before by his PUP colleague, Jacqui Lambie. Wang, like Lambie, has not yet met the Prime Minister. Unlike Lambie, he will reserve his judgement until then.
Welcome to the new Parliament and the issues commanding its initial focus. Goodness knows what the Prime Minister must be thinking about the task ahead, which begins in earnest next week when his agenda and the nation become hostage to the new Senate and its myriad characters who, Coalition Senate leader Eric Abetz pointed out this week, were “all God’s children”.
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Tony Abbott's changes to universities and health 'a crime, absurd', says Nobel Prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz
Date July 3, 2014
Peter Martin
Economics Editor, The Age
The government's plan to deregulate universities is "a crime" and the move for co-payments for medical services is "absurd" in the view of visiting Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz.
Asked by Fairfax Media to nominate the two biggest mistakes the government could make that would take it down the American path of widening inequality and economic stagnation, Professor Stiglitz chose the budget changes to university fees and Medicare. Each would make Australia more like the US.
"Countries that imitate the American model are kidding themselves," he said. "It seems that some people here would like to emulate the American model. I don't fully understand the logic."
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Former World Bank economist says Medicare reforms ‘absurd’
3rd Jul 2014
NOBEL prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz has slammed as "absurd" the Abbott government's health reforms, saying they would take Australia down the American path of widening economic inequality and stagnant growth.
Professor Stiglitz said budget changes to Medicare, including the planned introduction of a $7 co-payment, were the biggest mistakes the government could make along with the plan to deregulate university fees.
Warning that the government should not crib its policy directions from the US, he praised the Australian health system.
"Your outcome per dollar is probably the best or one of the best. Your equality of access is one of the best," said Professor Stiglitz, who is in Australia on a speaking tour. "Why would anybody… try to make your system like the American system? The US is at the bottom," he told the Sydney Morning Herald.
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Health report card reveals excellent grades
Date July 1, 2014
Ross Gittins
It’s good news week. There are lots of bad things happening in the world and journalists regard it as their job to dig them out and wave them in front of your face. No piece of disheartening news should go unreported.
But good things are happening, too. And I often think people would enjoy reading the news more if we didn’t ignore so many of them.
One of the main jobs of the federal government’s Australian Institute of Health and Welfare is to produce a report card on the state of Australia’s Health every two years. The latest edition is just out and it’s crammed with good news.
Perhaps our most basic desire is to delay our death, and on this score we’re doing particularly well. "Australians have one of the highest life expectancies in the world and can expect to live about 25 years longer, on average, than a century ago," the institute says.
In 1910, a baby boy could expect to live for 55 years and a baby girl 59 years. Today it’s 80 and 84. That puts us sixth highest on the world league table for boys and seventh for girls, but the countries coming top – Iceland and Japan – beat us by less than two years. And we leave the Yanks for dust.
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Labor says Federal Budget is “concerning” for HIV sector
Shadow Health Minister tells the Star Observer there is “nervousness” in the HIV sector over possible funding cuts.
HIV prevention efforts could be hampered by the introduction of the new $7 GP co-payment and funding cuts in the recent Federal Budget, Shadow Health Minister Catherine King has told the Star Observer.
The Labor health chief’s comments follow a meeting in Sydney with a number of groups including health body ACON, the Australian Federation of AIDS Organisations (AFAO), the National Association of People With HIV Australia and Organisation Intersex International.
“I think it’s really concerning,” said King.
“The GP tax will have a significant effect on the community both in terms of access to general practice, in terms of keeping people well but also on prevention and making sure that we continue down the pathway of reducing incidence of HIV.
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Private health insurance carrot feels more like a stick
Date June 28, 2014
Colin Cosier
Video journalist
When I turn 31 this week I’ll join a group of Australians who will be financially penalised for not having private health insurance. I’m not alone. Just more than half of all Australians are not insured.
I’m not covered because I don’t earn enough money to justify the premium and I don’t need it because I’m already covered under our perfectly adequate public health system, Medicare.
But, as a 1983 vintage, I’m about to cross the government’s starting line for the Lifetime Health Cover initiative.
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Health Department Moves.
Subsidy for diagnostic HbA1c moves closer
The final hurdle is in sight for government-funded diagnostic HbA1c testing for diabetes, with Federal Health Minister Peter Dutton considering a recommendation that the test be listed on the MBS.
The Medical Services Advisory Committee, the gatekeeper to the MBS, recommended HbA1c be funded for diagnosis of diabetes earlier this year.
Dr Graham Jones, spokesman for the Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia, said the college was strongly requesting funding approval for diagnostic HbA1c testing, in order to bring Australia in line with international recommendations.
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Funding for nurses in GP surgeries threatened by ruling
By SAM RIGNEY
July 2, 2014, 10:38 p.m.
CHANGES to multidisciplinary care in GP surgeries will place even more strain on the region's 650 overworked doctors, according to the Hunter's primary healthcare body.
Hunter Medicare Local said its members had raised concerns over a new Department of Health ruling which says nurses can no longer have the time they spend contributing to health assessments claimed under the Medicare Benefits Schedule.
Traditionally the time nurses spent on the assessments would be added to the GP's time when deciding whether to bill for a brief, standard, long or prolonged consultation.
Hunter Medicare Local board member and GP Dr Milton Sales said those patients were typically bulk billed, meaning the nurse's activity would become unfunded.
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Govt backflip on MBS claiming for nurses
3rd Jul 2014
THE government has swiftly scrapped a policy to disallow Medicare rebates for practice nurses who perform health assessments, only days after it was revealed.
The backflip came in response to a storm of protest by doctors, nurses and practice managers after the position was revealed on an obscure Medicare website on Monday.
GPs and managers were outraged, saying they would have to dismiss practice nurses who played a key part in their business plans and warning the move would have a serious impact on community health, especially for the elderly.
GPs and managers were outraged, saying they would have to dismiss practice nurses who played a key part in their business plans and warning the move would have a serious impact on community health, especially for the elderly.
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Medicare backflips in GP nurse saga
The looming GP nursing crisis has been averted after Medicare appears to have binned it is warning to doctors they cannot include nurse time when claiming MBS health assessments.
The warning was issued by Medicare on Monday but has now mysteriously been disappeared.
It declared that Medicare had been offering the "incorrect" advice to doctors over the last four years on the use of the items which underpin the Healthy Kids Checks and assessments for refugees, elderly patients and those at high risk of chronic disease.
The time nurses spent on the health assessments could not, as previously suggested, be added to the doctor's time in calculating which item to claim.
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Pharmacy.
Consumers hoodwinked by supermarket pharmacist ploy: Guild
Concerns about supermarket encroachment into healthcare have been ignited by pictures of what may be a pharmacist working in a retail outlet, part of an attempt to “hoodwink consumers”, the Pharmacy Guild of Australia believes.
The pictures (one of which is attached) show a person in a white coat standing in a supermarket aisle. They were described by the Guild as a “disturbing development” and as part of a plan to convince consumers they are receiving professional healthcare advice in supermarkets.
The photographs follow recent advertisements on employment website Seek.com by consumer engagement company, XPO Brands, looking for health professionals.
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Woolworths ‘health check’ scheme slammed
1st Jul 2014
DOCTORS and pharmacists are up in arms over Woolworths’ scheme to offer health checks in supermarkets by trainee chemists and nurses.
AMA president Associate Professor Brian Owler said the supermarket giant should drop a scheme to have graduating pharmacists and entry-level nurses conduct blood pressure and cholesterol tests for shoppers.
Professor Owler said the checks would encourage shoppers to think they could skip seeing their doctor.
“This is a dangerous idea that must be stopped before it gets off the ground,” he said.
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The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners call for Woolworths to scrap health checks
- PerthNow
- July 02, 2014
ONE of the country’s top doctors’ groups has called for the immediate scrapping of a plan to introduce health checks to supermarkets.
Nurses have been performing free blood pressure and cholesterol checks at nine Woolworths supermarkets since October.
Woolworths said yesterday it would review the trial extensively before expanding the service to more stores.
The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners today joined the growing chorus of critics of a plan to introduce health checks to supermarkets, calling for the program to be scrapped.
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Pharmacy groups fight over supermarket plans
A war of words has erupted between two pharmacy representative groups in the wake of the Woolworths' pharmacists in supermarkets saga.
Following the retail giants belated denial that it was responsible for advertisements calling for pharmacy students and graduates to conduct “health checks”, the Pharmacy Guild of Australia and Professional Pharmacists Australia are now in conflict over the union’s purported support of Woolworths.
In a release on Tuesday, Professional Pharmacists Australia said it “welcomed the introduction of Woolworths’ program” where pharmacists perform basic health checks in supermarkets, saying it “provided an alternative employment pathway for young pharmacists and could improve health outcomes for the community”.
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Guild argues against corporate pharmacy model
Deregulation of the Australian pharmacy sector would lead to the proliferation of “corporate” models of practice, the Pharmacy Guild of Australia believes.
In its submission to the Federal Government’s national competition policy review, the Guild says this high volume/low margin approach would focus on profitability and maximising shareholder value at the expense of independent community pharmacies.
“This model is particularly unsuitable to the practice of pharmacy because the need to decrease costs would put pressure on less profitable parts of pharmacy practice, in particular levels of professional care and ensuring that all Australians continue to have equitable and timely access to the full range of scheduled medicines,” said Guild executive director, David Quilty, writing in Guild newsletter, Forefront.
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Pharmacists not entitled to reimbursement: economist
Australian pharmacists do not have a “special entitlement” to taxpayer funds to ensure their profitability, says a health economist who is calling for a Productivity Commission review of the sector.
In an editorial in Australian Prescriber, Professor Philip Clarke of the Centre for Health Policy Program and Economics at the University of Melbourne, a well-known critic of the current pharmacy model, dismisses Pharmacy Guild calls for price disclosure compensation.
“If the government compensates pharmacists for more rapidly declining generic prices, should it not also compensate firms that sell computers or mobile phones, as they also face declining profit margins from falling prices?”
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2 July 2014, 8.20pm AEST
Turf war? Woolies' health checks fuss not just about patients
Wendy Lipworth
Senior Research Fellow, Bioethics at University of Sydney
When supermarket chain Woolworths announced plans to offer in-store “health checks” earlier this week, health groups came out in force to criticise the move. But scratch the surface and it’s apparent that the criticisms aren’t just about protecting the public.
The checks, which have been pitched by Woolworths as a service for their customers, will see final year pharmacy students, graduating pharmacists, and nurses measuring blood pressure and cholesterol, among other things.
Professional health groups, the Pharmacy Guild and the Australian Medical Association (AMA) have reacted negatively. AMA president Brian Owler has described the proposal as:
“a dangerous idea that should be stopped before it gets off the ground.”
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Medicare Local Impacts.
Health leadership concern
By GABRIEL WINGATE-PEARSE
June 30, 2014, 10:53 p.m.
THE Hunter has a battle on its hands to keep local control over vital health services.
And health professionals fear that without the right mix of experience and expertise, Hunter Medicare Local will lose its bid to become a player in the federal government's soon-to-be unleashed "primary health network".
That would open the door to private health insurers such as Medibank Private or BUPA to take over primary healthcare services in the region.
It is widely agreed that would be the death knell for the highly prized GP Access After Hours service, and other valued services run by Hunter Medicare Local, which has a reach of 750,000 people and employs 300 staff.
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Medicare local seeks advice
By HANNAH KNIGHT
June 29, 2014, 2:52 p.m.
LODDON Mallee Murray Medicare Local has appointed Dr Ewa Piejko as a medical adviser to the organisation.
Dr Piejko is a general practitioner in Strathfieldsaye and holds an Adjunct Associate Professor position with the Monash University School of Rural Health.
"My role as a medical adviser is really about providing some information and some practical application of how some of the projects and programs the medicare local wants to deliver for patients and how that translates into general practice," Dr Piejko said.
"So it's addressing things like how we can make some of the programs the government is rolling out more accessible to patients through general practice.
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Last day for Medicare Locals body
30th Jun 2014
THE dismantling of Labor’s regional primary care experiment has begun, with the peak body for the nation’s 61 Medicare Locals closing down after a bare two years of operation.
The Australian Medicare Local Alliance was given only about seven weeks to pack up by today’s deadline, after it was scrapped in the May budget with the loss of some 60 jobs.
In his parting message, AML Alliance chair Dr Arn Sprogis said the existing network of Medicare Locals would be “essential and central” to realise the government’s vision for primary healthcare through a new system of Primary Health Networks (PHNs).
“The organisational and human capital, skills and innovation embedded in existing Medicare Locals is a critical component for a successful PHN rollout, and AML Alliance has played a key role in making this possible,” he said.
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King calls on Capricornia MP to make stand on Medicare Local
2nd Jul 2014 2:39 PM
SHADOW Health minister Catherine King today called on the Member for Capricornia to stand up for the region's Medicare Local service.
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Comment:
It seems the fuss is not yet settled - to say the least. Will be fascinating to see how all this plays out.
The crucial New Senate is sitting for the next 2 weeks so anything may happen!
To remind readers there is also a great deal of useful health discussion here from The Conversation.
Also a huge section on the overall budget found here:
Enjoy.
David.