The Gold Coast Bulletin

Fund members fleeced

Medical devices prove pricier in private hospitals

- SUE DUNLEVY

THE battle over next year’s health fund price rise has begun with revelation­s premiums are $100 a year higher than they should be because devices like hip and knee replacemen­ts cost more in private hospitals.

Health fund members are paying $300 million a year more for medical devices in private hospitals than in public hospitals a report obtained by the Bulletin shows.

However, the Medical Technology Associatio­n of Australia, which commission­ed the report, says while cutting prices by that amount might lower premiums it could see some devices removed from the market.

“The risk we run if we implement cuts that are too big, or that are implemente­d too quickly is the impact it can have on the continuing availabili­ty of technology,” MTAA chief Ian Burgess said.

“This technology may not be viable in the private market and patients may end up paying gap payments,” he said.

The report will be a key weapon in a mighty battle over health insurance inflation that is about to erupt with health funds claiming medical device overpricin­g is even higher at $800 million a year.

A report by the government’s Independen­t Hospital Pricing Authority is expected to show the price difference is $1 billion a year, an amount that could lead to cuts in health fund premium rises of $370 a year.

A Federal Government committee sets the prices health funds pay for medical devices and health insurers want an across-the-board cut in prices to relieve pressure on their premiums.

Health funds have to put in their applicatio­ns for the April 2018 premium rise by November so they can be approved by Health Minister Greg Hunt.

The size of the next health fund premium rise due in April next year will depend in part on how much the minister is prepared to cut medical device prices.

The Pricewater­houseCoope­rs report was commission­ed by the MTAA and compares the prices public and private hospitals paid for devices manufactur­ed by its members which cover 70 per cent of the medical devices implanted in Australian­s in 2015-16.

It shows on average prices in private hospitals are 15.3 per cent higher and in total health fund members are paying $239 million more in the private sector.

If that average 15.3 per cent difference is applied to the other 30 per cent of medical devices not covered by the research the total savings would be in the order of $305 million, the report estimates.

The price difference­s are biggest in the cardiac sector where private hospitals pay 35 per cent more than public hospitals.

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