The Chronicle

Ominous warning for Aust patients

- STEVE ZEMEK

AUSTRALIA’S peak medical group has warned that GPs will be forced to slug patients in the hip pocket unless the Government addresses Medicare rebates which have become a “joke”.

The Australian Medical Associatio­n (AMA) said levels of indexation of Medicare had not kept pace with other measures of inflation.

It said the disparity was forcing doctors and medical practices to pass on costs to everyday Australian­s through higher out-of-pocket expenses, as well as reducing bulkbillin­g.

The AMA has previously said that from 1995 to 2022, medical services listed on the Medical Benefits Schedule have had an annual indexation rate of 1.1 per cent.

However other measures of the cost of running a medical practice – the CPI and Average Weekly Earnings – grew at 2.4 and 3.5 per cent respective­ly.

In the December 2022 quarter, the inflation rate reached 7.8 per cent – the highest in more than 30 years.

The AMA argued years of inadequate indexation had meant that medical practices had been forced to either absorb the costs of seeing patients or pass them on.

“Comparing Medicare indexation of 1.6 per cent with the indexation figure of 3.7 per cent for public hospital services … shows just how poorly Medicare is indexed, contributi­ng to declining bulk billing rates and higher outof-pocket costs for patients,” the AMA said in a statement on Sunday.

AMA president Professor Steve Robson said the indexation of Medicare was “broken”.

“The formula for indexing Medicare has become a joke,” he said.

“It is delivering an indexation rate that falls well behind the rate of increase in key economic measures like the Consumer Price Index, Average Weekly Earnings and the Wage Price Index.

“Years of inadequate indexation has meant the Medicare rebate no longer bears any relationsh­ip to the actual cost of providing high-quality services to patients,” he said.

“And this is one reason why we’re seeing more practices unable to offer bulk-billing for even the most vulnerable of patients, with wages and increasing practice running costs all funded from the rebate.”

The AMA said that successive government­s had stripped healthcare funding and had shifted the costs onto consumers.

“We can see how poor indexation saves the Government money but this is really stripping out essential funding in Medicare by stealth, with patients bearing the brunt of higher out-of-pocket costs,” Prof Robson said.

“Doctors can’t keep absorbing these costs and if the Government is serious about addressing affordabil­ity and access to medical care including general practice, it just can’t ignore indexation.”

 ?? ?? INDEXATION: AMA president professor Steve Robson says the government must address Medicare rebates.
INDEXATION: AMA president professor Steve Robson says the government must address Medicare rebates.

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