The Forum > Article Comments > Funding health care - a principled approach > Comments
Funding health care - a principled approach : Comments
By Ian McAuley, published 17/8/2007Funding of health care in Australia has no underlying, coherent principles resulting in waste and inequity.
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Estimates of the extent of illness that is preventable vary significantly but are at least 30%. Imagine the savings out of our current health budget if we achieved this. Then add to it the improvement in the general economy as workers took fewer sick days.
To achieve this we could:
1. Pay general practitioners when their patients are well (not when they are sick as at the moment)
2. Give bonuses to general practitioners who get their patients to live healthy lifestyles (as reported by Mike Moore in "Sicko")
3. Remove the barriers to nurses and allied health practitioners working from within general practices or wellness centres earning income from the MBS so that they could engage in preventative care.
4. Give GPs the funding to buy pharmaceuticals (and pathology and radiology services) for their patients with any savings going to the practitioner
5. Remove siloed funding so that practices could make tradeoffs between different modes of care - so that they could encourage patients to take physical activity rather than prescribing antidepressants.
This would require some structural changes such as patient registration with a practice, and monitoring against underservicing (just as we currently monitor against overservicing).
Measures such as these would encourage the truly multidisciplinary care that is needed to combat the huge growth in chronic disease and tackle the tsunami of obesity that will challenge our economy as chronic disease takes over. There is arguably enough money being applied to health care but it is poorly targeted and doesn't achieve what we want in keeping us healthy.
Most of all we need political and bureaucratic courage and leadership to move away from a system that is dominated by professional interests.