Pricing of general practice in Australia: some recent proposals to reform Medicare
- 1 October 2004
- journal article
- other
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Health Services Research & Policy
- Vol. 9 (2_suppl) , 63-68
- https://doi.org/10.1258/1355819042349899
Abstract
In the Australian Medicare system, general practitioners (GPs) are paid on a fee-for-service basis. A practitioner can choose to bill the government directly (termed bulk billing) and receive 85% of a regulated fee as full payment. Bulk billed consultations are free to the patient. However, GPs are free to charge above the regulated fee. The patient can then claim a rebate from the government but only the equivalent of 85% of the regulated Medicare fee. Such co-payments for GP consultations cannot be covered by private health insurance. In the ten years following the introduction of Medicare in 1984, the bulk billing rate for GP consultations steadily increased to 84%. Since then the rate has fallen to below 68%. In April 2003 the Minister for Health announced a reform package under the title A Fairer Medicare which aimed, among other things, to increase the availability of bulk billing for some patients. A key feature of the proposal involved changes to the way that GPs are reimbursed. Following political opposition that would have prevented it passing both houses of the federal parliament, a revised version, MedicarePlus, was released in November 2003. This paper describes the factors influencing a GP's choice to bulk bill and examines the two proposals, in this context.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- An Analysis of the General Practice Access Scheme on GP Incomes, Bulk Billing and Consumer CopaymentsAustralian Economic Review, 2004
- Policy change and private health insurance: did the cheapest policy do the trick?Australian Health Review, 2002
- Carrots and sticks—the fall and fall of private health insurance in AustraliaHealth Economics, 1999
- Do fee descriptors influence treatment choices in general practice? A multilevel discrete choice modelJournal of Health Economics, 1997
- Evaluating the effects of GP remuneration: problems and prospectsHealth Policy, 1995
- Should physicians be permitted to ‘balance bill’ patients?Journal of Health Economics, 1993