Showing posts with label SWSLHN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SWSLHN. Show all posts

Monday, May 2, 2011

SWSLHN and Bowral's Health - 6

Drug company reveals extent of payments to doctors

2nd May 2011 - Medical Observer
 
Mark O’Brien   all articles by this author

GLAXOSMITHKLINE’S decision to reveal how much it has paid to Australian healthcare professionals for speaking and consulting services during the past 12 months has set the bar for other companies, according to Healthy Skepticism spokesman Dr Jon Jureidini.

The company has announced it will make its payments public by July and update the figures regularly in an effort to make its operations more transparent.

Dr Jureidini said he welcomed greater transparency in payments from pharmaceutical companies to health professionals but would reserve judgement on the effectiveness of the initiative until the details were published.
“I will be interested to see the quality of the information they release,” he said.
 “It influences the way we doctors behave if we are given money. That information needs to be available to people who need to make judgements about our potential conflicts of interest.”

GSK medical director Dr Camilla Chong said the company hoped the initiative would help the manufacturer build trust with the public.
“It is important for people to understand the work we do,” she said.
“Unless we are transparent, there will always be this cloud over the industry.”

Dr Chong said the company expected the information released would include all grants, donations, consultancy fees and sponsorships made to healthcare professionals for research programs, advisory committee work and educational projects.

The figures will be updated and made available publicly on a regular basis.

The initiative follows the introduction in recent years of public reporting of spending on educational events, hospitality and entertainment for prescribers by Medicines Australia member companies.

Generic manufacturers have since followed suit, with Generic Medicines Industry Association member companies recently revealing for the first time the extent of their own spending on non-price benefit promotion of their products.
 
Tags: GlaxoSmithKline, Dr Jon Jureidini, Healthy Skepticism, Dr Camilla Chong, payments to health care professionals

Friday, April 29, 2011

SSWAHS = SWSLHN + SLHN and the Medicare Locals - 40

Mr Stephen Jones MP
PO Box 6022
House of Representatives
Parliament House
Canberra ACT 2600
 

Tel: (02) 6277 4661
Fax: (02) 6277 8548  


27 April 2011

Dear Mr Stephen Jones MP,

Medicare Local Submissions - April 5, 2011

I am aware that there were two applications by organisations bidding for the funding allocated for the SWS Medicare Local which was to include the Southern Highlands of NSW. It is my understanding that the Bankstown GP Division (SWS Health Coalition) has done so, and the Macarthur-Southern Highlands Divisions of General Practice have also submitted their application.

I am also aware that the intent of DoHA was that there should be extensive consultation with the local communities, local health practitioners in both the public and private health services, and the non-government organisations who provide health and welfare services to the residents of the Southern Highlands.

It is my understanding that the Macarthur-Southern Highlands Division’s application proposed that the current Southern Highlands Division would be a discrete part of the enhanced Macarthur Division of General Practice, who would have responsibility for the area between Fairfield- Bankstown and Bowral. I say it is my understanding simply because there has been no public discussion with the local Southern Highlands- Wollondilly communities, with the private health practitioners or with the NGOs by the Southern Highland Divisions of General Practice or, apparently, by the Macarthur Division of General Practice.

There have been no public meetings, nothing in the local press about the transition to Medicare Locals, and the only discussion by the CEO of the Southern Highlands Division of General Practice with a few members of the local private psychologist practitioners was to talk to them about introducing the ARGUS electronic communication system to their practices. The only discussion the CEO of the Southern Highlands Division of General Practice has been to inform some of the heads of Departments of the Bowral Hospital and Community Health Services that the funding of the current Division will end in July 2012 and that the liaison with the Macarthur Division was their Board’s proposed option. This does not amount to any form of robust discussion and involvement by the local community in how the Medicare Local would help the people of the Southern Highlands.

The contrast between the Macarthur-Southern Highlands Division’s lack of involvement with the local community and its health care providers, and the community-involvement actions seen in the Bankstown GP Division’s-SWS Health Coalition’s process for developing its application is extreme.
Yet when confronted with that significant difference the CEO of the Southern Highlands Division states that the assertion is “wrong” and “offensive” to say that there has been no community consultation. However, even a cursory examination of the Southern Highlands Division’s Newsletter (The Highlands Doctor) to its members shows that it has not been updated since July 2010. It would, therefore, seem that even its member GPs have not been kept informed as to what their Board has been negotiating with the Macarthur Division of General Practice.

The purpose of this letter, therefore, is to let you, and DoHA, know that the application by the Macarthur-Southern Highlands Divisions of General Practice is questionable in that:
1.       There does not appear to have been any significant community consultations with the people and health care providers in the Southern Highlands.
2.       There has been a veil of secrecy from the Southern Highlands Division of General Practice and the Macarthur Division in regard to what their planned intentions are in respect of how they would operate as a Federally-funded Medicare Local.
3.       There have been no public presentations to the community in the Southern Highlands and, possibly, in the Macarthur – Wollondilly jurisdictions to encourage community involvement and collaboration in the development of the Medicare Local proposed for the South West Sydney area.
4.       There has been no explanation to the local community as to how the Medicare Local would purchase the health services that would improve their health needs, in contrast to the existing available Medicare-funded health services in both the public and private sectors.
5.       There has been no indication that the general practitioners are aware of what their relevant Boards have proposed for the changed delivery of health services and how those changes will affect the viability of the whole health practitioner’s network.
6.       The AMA organisations in states and nationally appear to be gaining feedback from their members that the majority of GPs are unable to describe what the proposed Medicare Locals will do for their community members, or are opposed to the concept altogether. Since the outcome for Medicare Locals is dependent upon the GPs as well as other health professionals in the private sector one has to wonder if funded Medicare Locals will in fact obtain local support.
7.       It is questionable that, if the current Divisions of General Practice have difficulty in establishing transparent governance of their actions, how those same Boards will manage to introduce the transparent governance to the new Medicare Locals.
Yours sincerely,

A local resident.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

SSWAHS = SWSLHN and mental health in the Southern Highlands - 13


A tick for Opposition’s plans to improve employment services for people with mental illness

With mental health in the news, thanks in part to Tony Abbott’s recent funding promises, below is a Q and A piece with Professor John Mendoza, first published by The Conversation on April 21.

Why do so many mentally ill Australians struggle to maintain employment?

This is a critical policy issue for all Australian governments over the next decade. We’re clearly facing a skills shortage and that’s across the board, it’s not just in the mining sector.

We have to get a lot better at engaging people of working age who are not in employment.

Mental illness, often untreated, is one of the primary causes for the situation that we face.

About 28% of all Australians on the disability support pension have a primary mental health-based disability. Of the remaining 70%, around half have mental health problems as a secondary contributor.

The rate of employment for people with mental health conditions in OECD nations is nearly three times the rate of employment than Australia. Needless to say, Australia does very poorly in this area.

There are a number of reasons for this and the announcement by the Federal Opposition starts to address some of these issues.

***

How does the Coalition’s announcement build on existing infrastructure?

We’re already spending a lot of money increasing employment services for people with mental health disorders.

Commonwealth spending on disability support pensions and employment-related programs is around $5 billion. This provides income and support for people on the disability support pension, Newstart allowance and other benefits who are there because of mental health problems. But we’re not getting good outcomes from that spending.

What today’s announcement does is target a couple of specific areas where we know we can do better.

It’s not just a matter of preparing a person with significant mental illness to enter the workplace.

We need to place people in a workplace where they can receive support. A truly supportive work environment is where the culture recognises the way mental illness presents and manifests.

These workplaces support the employer to help keep that person engaged, modify activities, train co-workers on how to deal with mental health episodes and crises if they occur, and retain that person in employment.

The mental health blueprint, released last month, calls for a minimum investment across 30 targeted programs over four years.

We’ve got to lift our current rate of mental health funding as a proportion of total health spending – from around 6% towards 12% to 13%.

That’s a very big ask and no government of any persuasion is going to be able to do that in one or two terms. I think the Coalition is mindful that what was announced today is not enough.

***

Will we see more than just a bidding war from today’s announcements?

I have to be optimistic that this announcement is more than a bidding war. I certainly believe what the Coalition took to the last election and what they’re building on today could bring about real improvements.

The Rudd Government and, to an extent, the Gillard Government are “blowhards” when it comes to mental health. They’ve talked long and hard but they’ve delivered almost nothing.

Suicide prevention was the cornerstone of their mental health policy leading into the last election, with promises of spending $274m over four years.

In the first year, they’ve spent $10m. There’s a bit of a credibility gap when you say you’re going to deal with an issue and in the first year you spend only 2% of the funding that you’ve allocated.

The situation is similar when we look at the Headspace initiatives for increasing early intervention sites around the country.

Labor is spending most of the money not in the second term, but in the third term of government if they’re re-elected. I think that is gilding the lily on this issue.

We need to see the investment flying through fairly evenly, but building up over the four-year budget cycle.

Tony Abbott has basically picked out elements of the blueprint that were released by the working group last month. Many of the working group’s members are advisors to the Federal Mental Health Minister Mark Butler.

These are things members of this group have said privately to the government about what needs to be done.

Tony Abbott has said, very wisely, we know we’ve got a problem with employment participation for people with mental illness and I’m going to target that because it’s one of the areas where investments will produce dividends. The impact on the budget in the longer term will be a positive one.

We know employment participation is critical to people’s recovery, in lifting them out of poverty and helping them regain their sense of self.

Certainly social inclusion is improved dramatically by participating in work. So I think it’s a wise investment, it’s a smart policy, and it won’t cost the budget bottom line in the first instance.

Over the longer term, it will save an enormous amount in terms of the money we’re spending at the moment on disability support pensions and the like.

We’re spending this money now but without getting any movement on people going back to employment.

• John Mendoza is the Director of ConNetica Consulting Pty Ltd. He is the former chair of the the National Advisory Council on Mental Health (appointed by the Rudd Government in June 2008) and resigned in June 2010 citing a lack of vision or commitment to the issue.

One Comment

  1. Murf
    Posted April 22, 2011 at 11:49 pm

    If we’re going to get people who have mental health issues back into the workforce (and most of us who’ve been employed before are really keen to get back to it), we need to start training CentreLink not to send away unemployed females who don’t qualify for a benefit. I haven’t even been able to talk to anyone- just a quick dismissal on the phone, several times over the past 12 years (when I’ve had the occasional part-time job). They say “Use your professional networks- we can’t help people like you. We don’t have the sorts of jobs you’re looking for”. Slam. How can we have networks when we’ve been out of work for months or years? Huh? Will we just happen to bump into an employer who won’t run a mile as soon as we mention mental health issues? Better to keep it to yourself when there’s no one to back you up. Also, no one seems to realise how soul-destroying it is for females who have always been financially independent, to suddenly tie their fate to someone else because there are no supports in the community for them to fall back on. It makes mental health issues worse. Someone has to have a good think. Get back to me when there’s some news.

Friday, April 22, 2011

SWSLHN and Bowral's Health - 1


Challenging accepted wisdoms about young peoples’ health and wellbeing

Mental health is in the political limelight in the lead-up to the federal budget, with the Government and Opposition both promising support for mental health services.

The researcher and writer Richard Eckersley argues that we need to develop a much broader understanding of mental health and wellbeing in young people. In particular, he challenges the conventional narrative around the social determinants of health.

***

Challenging the accepted wisdom about young peoples’ health

Richard Eckersley writes:

The widely accepted story of young people’s health in developed nations is that it is continuing to improve in line with historic trends and the progress of nations. Death rates are low and falling, and most young people say they are healthy, happy and enjoying life. For most, social conditions and opportunities have improved. Health efforts need to focus on the minorities whose wellbeing is lagging behind, especially the disadvantaged and marginalised.

There is another, very different story. It suggests young people’s health may be declining – in contrast to historic trends. Mortality rates understate the importance of non-fatal, chronic ill-health, and self-reported health and happiness do not give an accurate picture of wellbeing. Mental illness and obesity-related health problems and risks have increased. The trends are not confined to the disadvantaged. The causes stem from fundamental social and cultural changes of the past several decades.

The contrast between the old and new stories is graphically illustrated by these Australian statistics: about 40 per 100,000 young people (aged 12-24) die each year and the rate is falling; 26,000 per 100,000 (26%) (aged 16-24) suffer a mental disorder each year and the rate has probably risen, perhaps steeply. Which statistic says more about young people’s wellbeing?

Stories inform and define how governments and society as a whole address youth health issues, so which story is the more accurate matters. The usual narrative says interventions should target the minorities at risk. The new narrative argues that broader efforts to improve social conditions are also needed. The old story may still generally hold true in developing nations, but the issues raised in the new story are also of increasing importance to these countries as modernisation and globalisation impact more on the lives of their young people.

A central dimension of the changed trajectory in health over recent decades, and which underpins the new story, concerns the declining significance of material and structural determinants of health and the growing importance of existential and relational factors to do with identity, belonging, certainty and purpose in life. There is a shift in emphasis from socio-economic causes of ill-health to cultural; from material and economic deprivation to psychosocial deprivation; from a problem of material scarcity to one of excess. With this has come a shift in significance from physical health to mental health.

This argument is not to suggest sharp, categorical distinctions and clear breaks from the past. Physical and mental health are closely interwoven and interdependent. Physical illness, including infectious diseases, still matter. Disadvantage and inequality still matter. Indeed, the cultural changes of past decades may well have exacerbated their effects by making material wealth and status more important to how people see and judge themselves. Environmental problems such as climate change have serious implications, including the risk of possible catastrophic effects on human health.

The contrast between the old and new stories of young people’s health and wellbeing is part of a larger contest between the dominant narrative of material progress and a new narrative, sustainable development. Material progress sees economic growth and a rising standard of living as the foundation for a better life; sustainable development seeks a better balance and integration of economic, social and environmental goals to produce a high, equitable and enduring quality of life.

Material progress represents an outdated, industrial model of progress: pump more wealth into one end of the pipeline of progress and more welfare flows out the other. Sustainable development reflects (appropriately) an ecological model, where the components of human society interact in complex, multiple, non-linear ways. Not only does sustainable development better fit the new story of youth health, it is likely to achieve better outcomes in relation to the old story’s focus on socio-economic disadvantage and inequality because it less intent than material progress on economic growth and efficiency.

The health of young people should be a focal point in the larger contest of social narratives. They should, by definition, be the main beneficiaries of progress; conversely, they will pay the greatest price of any long-term economic, social, cultural or environmental decline and degradation.

If young people’s health and wellbeing are not improving, it is hard to argue that life is getting better.

• This is an edited extract from: Eckersley, R. 2011. A new narrative of young people’s health and wellbeing. Journal of Youth Studies. First published 13 April 2011 (iFirst) (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13676261.2011.565043). An author version is available at www.richardeckersley.com.au

• Richard Eckersley is a director of Australia21 Ltd, an independent, non-profit research company and a visiting fellow at the Australian National University.

Friday, April 15, 2011

SSWAHS = SWSLHN and mental health in the Southern Highlands - 12



Mental health: a continuing history of neglect

Chronic disease prevention is gathering increasing steam, at a national and international level. So why is mental health not part of this agenda? Richard Eckersley argues that the importance of mental health continues to be neglected, and not only in Australia.

Richard Eckersley writes:

Physical and mental health are closely interwoven and deeply interdependent, the result of a complex interaction of biological, psychological and social factors. Medicine, however, continues to focus on the biological and neglect the psychosocial, despite the growing recognition of its importance to population health.

This artificial separation has been a formidable obstacle to understanding mental health; as a consequence, its importance to the wellbeing of individuals, communities and societies has been underestimated. Both developing and developed countries show this bias towards physical health, and especially mortality.

Developing countries tend to give priority in health to infectious disease and reproductive and child health; developed countries prioritise non-communicable diseases that cause early death (such as cancer and heart disease) over those that cause years lived with disability (such as mental disorders).

The relative neglect of mental health is seen in the growing efforts in disease prevention and health promotion, both internationally and nationally. These include: the WHO global strategy for the prevention and control of non-communicable diseases; the Oxford Health Alliance; the Trust for America’s Health (in a report, ‘Prevention for a healthier America’); and the Australian National Preventative Health Taskforce (in its strategy paper, ‘Australia: the healthiest country by 2020’).

All imply a wide health perspective, but focus on the physical diseases that contribute most to premature mortality, notably cardiovascular diseases, cancer, chronic respiratory diseases and diabetes. These diseases account for about 60% of all deaths globally.

The efforts will culminate in the United Nations’ first high-level meeting of the General Assembly on chronic non-communicable diseases in September 2011, billed in Lancet as ‘a once in a generation opportunity to put chronic diseases on the global and national agendas’. These diseases have been ‘surprisingly neglected elements of the global-health agenda’. Mental illnesses, while also chronic, non-communicable diseases, are not part of this agenda, but are acknowledged to be ‘similarly ignored’.

About 450 million people worldwide are suffering mental illness; only a small minority receives treatment. Worldwide, community-based studies have estimated the lifetime prevalence of mental disorders at 12%-49%, and 12-month prevalence at 8%-29%. In 2004, neuropsychiatric conditions as a group accounted globally for 13.1% of the total burden of disease, measured as both death and disability (disability-adjusted life years or DALYs), the second largest contributor after infectious and parasitic diseases. They account for about a third of the burden of disability, making them the most important source. Depressive disorders are the third largest specific cause of death and disability (and the largest in high- and middle-income countries), and are projected to become the leading cause by 2030. Yet the median allocation of the total health budget of nations to mental health is only 3.8%.

The ‘global burden of disease’ study has played a seminal part in exposing the importance of mental health to overall population health. However, its estimates of the burden of mental illness may still understate its significance for several reasons:

  • mental disorders might affect many more people than the burden of disease estimates suggest, especially in middle- and low-income countries.
  • the estimates do not include the growing burden of suicide and self-inflicted injuries, which is counted under injuries.
  • the burden of mental disorders (in sharp contrast to chronic, physical diseases) falls mostly on those under 60, so increasing the personal, social and economic costs.
  • mental disorders increase the risk of physical diseases and injuries, with one estimate that depressive disorders raise the risk of all-cause mortality by about 70%, and affect adherence to treatment for other diseases.

Aspects of this picture of mental health have been contested. For example, it has been argued that the high prevalence of mental disorders reflects changed DSM diagnostic criteria and the medicalisation of normal human emotions. This is part of a wider concern about the medicalising of life itself, and ‘disease mongering’: the selling of sickness that widens the boundaries of illness and grows the markets for those who sell and deliver treatments, including the medicalisation of health problems previously regarded as ‘troublesome inconveniences’.

While medicalisation is undoubtedly occurring in the sense that new treatments are being developed for new conditions, this does not negate the core argument here that mental illness has been neglected relative to physical illness. The charge of ‘disease mongering’ applies to both physical and mental health, and is directed particularly at treatment provision. Indeed, it has been specifically associated with a policy priority of market-based economic development at the expense of more equitable social policies, such as public-health strategies. (Ironically, the medicalisation of mental health has contributed to greater awareness of its importance.)

Questions of definition, diagnosis and treatment aside, the disability associated with mental health problems is generally higher than for other chronic conditions. Even mild cases cause levels of impairment equivalent to those associated with clinically significant, chronic physical disorders.

People attribute higher disability to mental disorders than to commonly occurring physical disorders, especially with respect to their ‘social and personal role functioning’ (with ‘productive role functioning’, the disability of mental and physical disorders is comparable). A comparison of the disability of 15 disease stages found severe depression ranked third behind quadriplegia and being in the final year of a terminal illness, and ahead of stroke and acute myocardial infarction.

This is an edited extract from:
Eckersley R. 2011. The science and politics of population health: giving health a greater role in public policy. WebmedCentral PUBLIC HEALTH 2011; 2(3):WMC001697.

Richard Eckersley is a director of Australia21 Ltd, an independent, non-profit research company and a visiting fellow at the Australian National University.

One Comment

  1. carolinestorm@iinet.net.au
    Posted April 13, 2011 at 11:33 pm

    “… focus is on the physical diseases that contribute most to premature mortality.”
    So, are the seriously mentally ill to be allowed slowly to become more deprived of treatment and hospital care? Already only a third receive these when in crisis, according to the MHCA. Are they still to be deprived of psychotherapy, essential to to their well-being; are they further to be deprived of social therapies, and more and more descend into homelessnness and complete social exclusion? Why does focussing on the diseases which contribute most to premature mortality exclude the seriously mentally who, in Australia, have a life expectancy of some 55 years.
    More and more suicides will occur as the seriously mentally ill realise, finally, the greatest stigma of all: this is too hard; we’ll just leave it and see what happens.
    What can be done? How can we help? Many people care, but how do we become a force for change?
    But even hope lessens as Richard Eckersley cites the WHO as excluding mental illness from its global strategy of prevention and control of non-communicable diseases.
    The Australian Budget, 2011, is to be made public tomorrow…and little hope there.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

SWSLHN + SLHN = SSWAHS

The NSW State Government's approach to health, immediately after the election, gets a big tick from Socrates for terminating the incumbent Director General of Health, Ms Debra Picone.

Her departure is possibly the first of many who will depart from a Health Department, populated as it was by the previous government and Minister, of political appointees who had their snouts in the trough to obtain the best outcome for themselves and their pet projects.

Now to the last thing the previous NSW government did before it was shown the door in March. On the 1st of January 2011, the Health Minister announced that the new Local Health Networks (LHNs) had commenced in NSW. This meant that the previous Area Health Services had, in many cases, been divided into (marginally) smaller LHNs.

For us in the Southern Highlands it simply reverted back to the partition of SSWAHS into the old Central Sydney AHS and the old South West Sydney AHS, with this time, an additional layer of bureaucratic governance with a CEO overseeing a cluster of such LHNs.

Now here was the catch. Previously the old SSWAHS had streamed their clinical services to provide their specialist services across the entire jurisdiction of the SSWAHS. This meant, for example, that cancer services, cardiac services, mental health services, etc, would be provided to, and be accessible by, all residents in the SSWAHS.

After initially stating that the Area-wide clinical services will still provide access to all the residents of the old SSWAHS it now seems that the current administration of the Sydney LHN (the old Central Sydney AHS) is suggesting that they have sole right to all the clinical services within the Sydney LHN jurisdiction. Put simply, that means no resident of the Southern Highlands can expect to have access to the clinical services located at Concord Hospital, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney Hospital, Balmain Hospital and St Vincent's Hospital.

This may seem very little loss to residents in the Southern Highlands as we still have access to Campbelltown Hospital, Camden Hospital, Liverpool Hospital and Bankstown Hospital as well as our own Bowral Hospital. The reality is, however, there are not a sufficient range of medical specialties in Bowral, and Camden Hospitals and the distance to Bankstown Hospital is considerable.

So, for example, suppose someone in the Southern Highlands requires treatment and residential care for an acute mental illness. Bowral Hospital has a couple of beds available for people with a sub-acute episode which does not require involuntary treatment. The beds are embedded within the whole complement of available beds in the hospital so they could be available, but then again, they may not. And what if the person requires an involuntary treatment and admission?

In the old SSWAHS people from the Southern Highlands requiring specialist treatment in one of the old clinical streams went first to Campbelltown Hospital and then to Liverpool, Concord, RPAH and Bankstown hospitals wherever the specialist beds were available. With the new LHNs our residents will be limited to Campbelltown, Liverpool and Bankstown hospitals.

Another feature of the old SSWAHS was that the local health funding for Bowral Hospital and its Community Health Services was drawn back into the specialist Clinical Divisions to fund, among other things, the budget over-runs of the big northern hospitals. It was also used to fund the budget over-runs and other capital costs associated with the building and renovations of the big northern hospitals. At the same time, Bowral Hospital survived on the donations and fund-raising of the local people, businesses and community groups to fund our two renal dialysis chairs and the refurbishment of the children's ward.

It is, perhaps, not unexpected that a SSWAHS Executive, that was appointed by the previous NSW Labor government, was drawn mainly from the old Central Sydney AHS. After all the previous Labor Minister for Health has her seat in Marrickville - central to Central Sydney AHS. The SSWAHS CEO, his Deputy and most of the Directors and Executive members all came from Central Sydney AHS. Some, but not all have headed back to the Sydney LHN taking with them the bulk of the funding and the capital works developments of Concord Hospital and RPAH.

As I have said in the blog many times, SSWAHS administration has overlooked Bowral Hospital and the Southern Highlands, probably because it was seen as a "safe" Liberal seat. Now that we have a new Liberal/National coalition government we appear to be again overlooked because we are an even "safer" Liberal seat!

By now some of you may be wondering why the title of this blog posting has changed to SWSLHN + SLHN = SSWAHS. Well, it does seem as the wheel may have turned full circle again. An informant has told me that the Federal Labor government is unhappy about the additional layer of bureaucracy imposed on the NSW health system with the LHNs and the LHN Cluster overseers. It would appear that even prior to the dismal showing of the NSW Labor government in March they had been advised to revert back to the super Area Health Services. Hence, the Southern Highlands will likely come under a re-formed SSWAHS but, hopefully, without the Executive misfits who always found it hard to look beyond Campbelltown.

Socrates, ever the optimist, is hoping that the new coalition government, and their new Director-General for Health, will not only accept the advice of the Commonwealth but also ensure that any new NSW health structure will take into consideration the possibility of local members having a greater say in their local hospitals, and that funding be commensurate to ensure that the hospital and community health services can provide the services required by the local people, locally.

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

SSWAHS = SWSLHN and mental health in the Southern Highlands - 7


Explaining the new blueprint to transform mental health services

This post is responding to a recent Croakey article, “So you’re wondering what’s happening with mental health at a federal level?”, by Professor Alan Rosen.

Sebastian Rosenberg and Professor Ian Hickie write:

Alan Rosen’s recent article raises some important points and the need to clarify a couple of issues.

He is certainly right that the recently released Blueprint to Transform Mental Health Services in Australia is not the whole solution to fixing mental health. There are evidence-based services apart from those specified that would indeed merit ongoing investment, including assertive community treatment, mobile acute teams etc. However, as services largely provided by states and territories currently, they were simply out of scope in terms of providing a budget submission to the Commonwealth.

The crazed determination to deliver a budget surplus is now forcing Prime Minister Gillard and her Ministers to seriously lower expectations about the budget, wet the ground for the traditional horror-budget which typifies the first year of most administrations. As reported in countless parliamentary and other inquiries, mental health is so far behind the game that it cannot afford to be caught up in this.

The Independent Mental Health Reform Group which prepared the Blueprint was an informal group which got together for a few weeks specifically to keep some blowtorch of pressure on the Federal Government to make good its promise to make mental health a second term agenda priority.

The Group was comprised of the usual suspects in some ways, people with a long track record of cajoling governments into greater action and investment in mental health. The Blueprint merely reflects the views of the Group, which never intended and was never resourced to undertake broad public consultation.

Unlike the impression given by Professor Rosen, the Group was not constructed, mandated or authorised by Minister Butler or anybody else and had no relationship to any existing committee or body. Minister Butler did not commission the Blueprint. The presence of Monsignor David Cappo meant that the group did have an excellent insight into how best to shape and present its advice to government however there were others on the group with an excellent understanding of the federal budget process.

The Blueprint is one of no doubt myriad budget submissions made by different professional and community groups, attempting to influence the direction and scale of Federal Budget decisions. It is certainly true that key health professional groups have already made formal budget submissions, such as the Australian Medical Association and the Australian Psychological Society. It is less clear the extent to which community sector organisations have made submissions.

Professor Rosen is correct in that the Blueprint really focuses on clearly listing actions the Federal Government is able to take autonomously, without reference to state or territory jurisdictions. This inherently limits the scope of the Blueprint but fits with the imperative to provide urgent advice about intelligent Federal spending options in the upcoming Budget.

As far as we know, there has been no commitment to establish a second National CoAG Action Plan on Mental Health, to replace the first plan which lapses this year. If a second plan is proposed, then the Blueprint lists a series of vital areas of state responsibility where their contribution to a new CoAG plan should be directed. These areas do not include continued mindless investment in new acute hospital beds.

The Blueprint also clearly states the need to ensure that mental health’s share of the promised new 1300 sub-acute beds is not allowed to create new hospital-based warehouses to catch the overflow from psychiatric wards.

Professor Rosen is correct in asserting that CoAG-type intergovernmental agreements seem to fail more often than succeed. However, should a second CoAG Action Plan be agreed, we would strongly suggest the establishment of a clear set of Commonwealth incentives and sanctions to persuade the states and territories to purposively fund the areas identified as priorities in the Blueprint, particular the type of evidence-based community services described by Professor Rosen, or other community-based innovative services. This type of approach to incentives was actually successful in the First National Mental Health Plan and really not attempted since.

While this type of coordinated action is important for holistic reform investment in mental health in the future, the Blueprint represents the vital contribution the Commonwealth can make right now. So let’s get on with it.

• Sebastian Rosenberg and Professor Hickie are from the Brain and Mind Research Institute at the University of Sydney

Comments

  1. skipjack
    Posted April 4, 2011 at 4:39 pm

    The closing of institutions has let to people being thrown onto the street and at the mercy of for profit providers of accommodation where there are no nurses or mental care at all. They call them hostels but they are really flea pits. And this was meant to be an improvement on institutional care.
    I have a mother in a mental health ward, and I just want to say that we need to bring back the word ‘insane’ to differentiate the truly sick, who need full time care, from those with temporary mental illnesses and illnesses not requiring full time care.
    Bring back care for the insane, and stop throwing them onto the street – or into the hands of private sector jocks who rip them off in flea infested hostels.

  2. Posted April 5, 2011 at 11:26 am

    Yes let’s!

    Those pushing for mental health reform may not always agree point-to-point, but we’re harmonising like never before on the basic problem – we need billions invested in the mental health system – and it must be community-integrated and ongoing!

  3. Posted April 5, 2011 at 11:27 am

    And congratulations by the way for taking the initiative.

Saturday, April 2, 2011

SSWAHS = SWSLHN + SLHN + Medicare Locals and Rural Health in the Southern Highlands

Some searing critique of the health system from John Menadue and others at the national rural health conference

Two particularly searing critiques of the health sector were given yesterday on the final day of the national rural health conference in Perth.

John Menadue, of the Centre for Policy Development, titled his paper, “Beating the hospital obsession; the key to rural health reform is in primary care”. (Update: you can now watch his presentation here).

His themes were very much reinforced by a subsequent presentation by the University of South Australia’s Professor Robyn McDermott, who coined the memorable line that we are poisoning our old folks (with harmful polypharmacy) and fattening the young (via our failure to take effective policy action on obesity).

Below is an edited extract of Menadue’s speaking notes, as well as a selection of my conference tweets of some of his key points, and a short summary of McDermott’s presentation, and related tweets.

***

Edited version of John Menadue’s speaking notes

The summary:

There are systemic problems in our health sector – a lack of guiding values and principles, governance confusion, exclusion of the community from health decisions, rapidly rising costs and the obsession with hospitals. We are bedevilled by powerful special interests.

But what are the particular issues which advocates of rural health reform should promote?

First, the driver of rural health reform must be primary healthcare with particular attention to the Medicare Locals and the roll out of the GP super clinics. The MBS schedule should be amended and contracts written with corporate and non-corporate general practices to promote integrated care.

Second, there are many health determinants and services outside the health portfolio that are vital – NBN, prevention and transport. Paper records are problematic enough in the cities. They slow down information transfers even more severely in the bush.

Third, unless there is an informed and open discussion about how the health dollar is spent, the media-savvy and the special interests in the city will squeeze out the major health priority needs in this country – rural health, Indigenous health and mental health.

Fourth, we need an upgrading and re-skilling of tens of thousands of people in the health sector who could help fill the gaps in the delivery of health services for country people. Particular attention must be given to expanding the roles of nurse practitioners, other allied health, pharmacists and ambulance officers. We don’t so much need more doctors; we need an up-skilling of tens of thousands of other clinicians. We need also to make sure we make best use of the skills they already have.

Disappointment of health reform

I was sceptical about the claims of Kevin Rudd last June that the health reforms were ‘the greatest since Medicare’. I have seen little since then, including the Commonwealth Government announcement in association with the premiers last month that would change my mind. It is more muddling through.

What a disappointment it has been since the federal government came to power in 2007 with what I hoped were well considered strategies for healthcare reform and the means to implement them.

But before I become too pessimistic, let me acknowledge some incremental improvements that have been announced in recent months. They will be valuable – activity-based hospital funding, some local governance of hospital networks, primary healthcare organizations to aid primary healthcare integration and broader health service planning, including I expect, full Commonwealth responsibility for aged care.

At last there is some progress on e-health, although only this week the Victorian Government and the Liberal Opposition in NSW expressed reservations about the new systems being introduced in those states. There is clearly more money, but I believe that we are not getting value for the money we already spend. A survey of Canadians over 45, who were experienced healthcare users, showed that 58% did not believe that healthcare would improve if the government spent more money in health. I believe the same is true in Australia. We should be spending existing money much more effectively. We waste about $10 b pa or 10% of our total health expenditure.

Major problems and omissions remain

  • It is not at all clear that the government has any clear values and principles which guide its health policies, e.g. universality, equity, efficiency – both technical and allocative – subsidiarity and single-funder. Without such guiding principles health policy will continue to be subject to managerial fads, responses to hot-button issues and the placating of noisy and selfish special interests.
  • Governance problems between the Commonwealth and the States remain. A 60/40, 40/60 or a 50/50 split doesn’t make any difference to divided responsibility. It seems that the Australian public are better prepared for reform than the Government with a strong majority in most states favouring a Commonwealth takeover of state hospitals. In addition to the unresolved Commonwealth/state issue, I have also come to the view that the traditional minister/departmental model in health is no longer viable given the size of the health sector, its complexity, its inertia and the power of vested interests. (Professor Garnaut refers to these interests in carbon pollution and mining as ‘diabolical’. They are more subtle, but just as diabolical in health.) For these reasons I have proposed a statutory Commonwealth Health Commission composed of professional and independent people, but subject to government guidelines to administer health programs in Australia. This would be similar to the way the Australian Reserve Bank acts in the monetary policy field. The health sector has broadly agreed for a decade about the general shape of necessary reform, but it has not happened because of the political power of health lobbyists to preserve corporate welfare, high prices and work practices, particularly by specialists who exploit their market power.
  • The community is still largely excluded from health discussions and decisions. The Prime Minister and the Minister deal overwhelmingly with special interests and ignore the community except for some token photo opportunities, mainly in hospitals.
  • Costs are continuing to rise at 5% real per annum. It is not, as often suggested, that it is ageing that is driving up healthcare costs. We all see our doctor or specialist far too much, across all age groups. In 1984/85, Medicare services per person per annum were 7.1 services. By 2007/08 it had increased to 13.1 services and this increase was across all age groups. This is a doubling over 13 years of the number of times we see our doctor. The cosy deal between the government and the Australian Pharmacy Guild, results in Australian taxpayers and consumers paying $300 m more each year for statins compared with England and Canada. This is only for statin drugs which represent only about 16% of the costs of the PBS. We can’t afford these exploitive high prices.
  • Fee for service is quite inappropriate for chronic care. It has perverse incentives. It encourages doctor shops and ‘turnstile’ medicine. It discourages integrated care. Present payment methods are underwriting the rapid growth of corporatisation of general practice in Australia, up to 30% in some metropolitan areas.
  • The health workforce is still mired in 19th Century work practices.
  • 70% of health expenditure in Australia is for treating chronic disease – heart, cancer, neurological, mental and diabetes. But the public campaign, particularly in the media, focuses on waiting lists and emergency departments in hospitals.
  • Dental health is still a Cinderella as is mental health, although we may hear more about the latter in the near future.
  • But probably the most serious problem is the continuing obsession with hospitals, an obsession shared, I must say, by the media, many health professionals and the community. According to OECD data, we have for example more acute beds per 1000 of population than in the UK, Canada or Sweden. But the continual drum-beat in Australia is for more hospital beds to accommodate particular medical fashions. In the last decade caesarean sections have increased by about 50% and joint replacement by almost 70%. We all know that about 10% of people in hospitals would not be there if there were proper alternatives available, and that it costs about ten times as much to treat a patient in hospital compared with treatment in the community. The Productivity Commission in 2008 said that 450,000 admissions to public hospitals could have been avoided if there was better community care in the three-week period before hospital admission.

Private health insurance and country people

A particular issue which should concern country people is the inequity and inefficiency of the $5 billion p.a. government subsidy to high cost private health insurance companies. Put simply, this corporate welfare enables relatively wealthy people in the cities to jump the queue for elective surgery in private hospitals and it deprives public hospitals of resources. Recent data from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (Australian Health Expenditures by Remoteness, January 2011, page 41) shows how this subsidy short-changes country people because of the few private hospitals in country areas.

In 2006/2007, the latest year for which these figures are available, the expenditure per person in private hospitals in the country compared with major cities was 16% lower in ‘inner regional’; 34% lower in ‘outer regional’; 48% lower in ‘remote’ and 60% lower in ‘very remote’. By contrast, public hospitals served the country community much better. Compared with expenditure in public hospitals per person in major cities, public expenditure in public hospitals in ‘inner regional’ hospitals was 10% higher, 28% higher in ‘outer regional’; 68% higher in ‘remote’ and 250% higher in ‘very remote’.

Country people are being duded by the $5 b p.a. subsidy. Yet National Party MPs allow themselves to be led by the nose by the Liberals. Because there are so few country private hospitals, the $5 b p.a. subsidy inevitably operates to the disadvantage of country people. The transfer of this $5 b subsidy to rural health, mental health and indigenous health would have dramatic benefits. That would be $50 b over ten years. The new hospital package that Julia Gillard announced last month is only $16 b over ten years.

Winning the case for country health reform

On almost any measure, country people have worse health outcomes than city people. Mainly due to lack of early detection, cancer sufferers outside capital cities are 35% more likely to die within five years. Country sufferers of heart disease are more likely to die early. The story is similar across the board – stroke, birth defects and mental disorders.

Four major issues on which country health reform should focus

First, primary care. The inequity in healthcare in Australia, rural, mental and indigenous, will only be effectively addressed through primary care, not hospitals. The dignity, autonomy and good health of all citizens are best served by delivering health services in the home or as locally as possible. It is the principle of subsidiarity.

Second, health improvements are just as likely to be advanced outside the health portfolio, eg broadband.

Third, winning the debate for priority-setting and allocation of health dollars depends on an informed community. Unless this is done, the well-organised and worried-well in the cities will continue to skew resources in their favour. Unless country people can win the debate, they will continue to be unfairly serviced in health.

Fourth, workforce reform.

Primary Care

In the hospital sector, it is hard to teach old dogs new tricks. Ministers, officials and professionals with their century-old ways of doing things, are hard to change. They think institutions and providers rather than people, and the almost sacredness of existing work practices. Primary care offers the best prospect of services for country people, integrated care, the curtailment of chronic disease, reduced service fragmentation and increased efficiency, particularly through new work practices. As Jennifer Doggett has set out in ‘A new approach to primary care…’ (CPD, June 2007), primary care provides

  • A greater focus on prevention
  • Faster medical action
  • Consolidated service delivery
  • A seamless one-step approach
  • Consolidated history with test results
  • Better access for all.

As Jennifer Doggett summarises it, ‘Primary care reform is the single most important strategy for improving our health and making the health system sustainable. Community level prevention and primary care is essential to restoring universality and efficiency in Australian healthcare’. Health decisions and health services must be made at the most local level possible – the principle of subsidiarity.

In the long and recent statements arising from the government’s obsession with hospitals, there has been included, almost as a footnote, that ‘the Commonwealth will have full funding and policy responsibility for general practice and primary care … including community health centres … and aged care’. Those few lines if properly and fully implemented could really reform and transform healthcare in Australia. That reform won’t come through hospitals.

How Medicare Locals develop will be an important key. The first thing that government should do is change their name to make it clear that these entities will not be delivering care. This is not just a cosmetic issue. They must be seen to be, and in fact become, regional planners and co-ordinators with adequate funds based on population and socioeconomic needs and for the purchasing of some services. They must be proactive in prevention. They must develop so that they can influence all hospital and non-hospital services in their region. These newly named entities must have resources and government support to drive regional planning and the delivery of services by others, e.g. early childhood, schools, welfare, housing and transport both for patients and families. Dialysis is a major problem. These new entities must be judged by their health outcomes and not their health inputs. They must get away from the medical model based on sickness that determines so much of what we do in health. If they in fact become a new name for the Divisions of General Practice, they will fail. I suggest that the rural health alliance should be focusing its activities on the development of these new entities, mistakenly called ‘Medicare locals’.

We also need to improve General Practice. I spoke earlier about fee-for-service dramatically putting up costs and discouraging integrated care. The government should consider two possible changes. The first is that the MBS schedule be amended to permit private practices to remunerate a supervising general practitioner in their practices. That supervising GP would be remunerated for over-sighting the treatment and referral of patients and their records. The second is that the government should offer to negotiate contracts with practices, both corporate and non-corporate, that will commit to the delivery of integrated care. I expect that the government would be agreeably surprised at the number of GP practices that would respond because of their concern about the ‘turnstile’ nature of a lot of general practice in Australia today.

What of the GP super clinics that the Commonwealth is rolling out? Including this year the Government will be spending $650 m over two years on 64 clinics. It is not yet clear that these clinics are on the right track. I hope we don’t have another insulation mess.

  • I can’t see that the roll out of these clinics is part of a universal program. Only six of the planned 64 are operating. Why call them ‘super’? I should have thought they should be ordinary and common-place. They do appear to be part of a marginal-seat strategy rather than a health strategy.
  • ‘GP’ suggests that it is doctor-centric, when the emphasis should be on multi-disciplinary teams with enrolled patients/families. Often the need is not even for a clinician, particularly for people who face lifestyle and social problems. Often a case-manager is necessary to access other agencies, e.g. education, housing and justice.
  • Are the clinics the right size to enable the team to be made up of a wide range of health professionals, or will they be GP clinics with a few and limited professional add-ons?
  • Emphasis seems to be on bricks and mortar and co-location, rather than the provision of integrated care. Accommodation under one roof does not necessarily lead to integration.
  • How can the MBS be amended to promote more team treatment and payments to all professionals in the clinic?
  • Two vitally interested organisations, the Australian Nurses’ Federation and the Australian Practice Nurses’ Association have heard very little about the program.
  • The Australian Pharmacy Guild has refused to allow professional pharmacists to join the clinics unless they do so as shop-keepers. That clearly tells me that the APG is more concerned about shop-keeping than the professionalism of its members.
  • There is a ‘deafening’ silence about the superclinics and how they are performing. The fact that the AMA is saying little, suggests to me that the program is not going well.

Improving health outside the health portfolio

The mis-named Medicare Locals must also drive improved health services outside the health portfolio.

Ministers for Health in Australia are seen very largely as ministers in charge of health services rather than health. The fact is that some major issues causing poor health or which could be the means to improve health are outside the normal health portfolio.

  • Medicare has become a payments vehicle, and an efficient one, rather than a health insurance commission as its name suggests was intended. How can we have integrated health funding, even at the Commonwealth level, when the Minister for Human Services, not the Minister for Health, has administrative responsibility for Medicare.
  • The major health problems caused by junk food, alcohol and tobacco are best addressed through taxation and restrictions on advertising, particularly for children. (Health improvement is made very difficult when the major sponsors of sport in Australia are interests associated with alcohol and junk food. They are complicit in promoting bad health habits and undo a lot of the good work on prevention. How can our sporting codes discipline players for excessive alcohol consumption, when the main sponsors of the codes are liquor companies?)
  • We know that because of social and economic disadvantage, the death rate for those with the lowest socio-economic status is 13% higher than the Australian average, and for those living outside capital cities it is 8%. Poverty is the principal cause of poor health in Australia.
  • Education, childcare, including pre-natal, spacial planning, housing, trade (particularly relating to intellectual property in pharmaceuticals), population, transport, taxation and social security, employment, justice and the environment, all have direct impacts on the health of Australians.
  • We are coming to appreciate how electronic health and the national broadband network offer great opportunities for improved health services, particularly for people in remote areas. They offer a new model of care particularly for remote and chronically ill patients. It will hopefully be possible to bill Medicare for online treatments. But the NBN is not within the health portfolio. NBN can transmit data-rich information such as scans and close-up real-time high definition videos, say, of a burn or a cancerous skin mark.

In short, the health Minister and her department must have expertise beyond ‘health services’ and particularly economic expertise in a joined-up government approach.

As Ian McAuley has put it:

One problem … is a reluctance by policy makers to look on healthcare as an industry and to apply the normal evaluative mechanisms which are applied to other industries. Such a blinkered view allows the development of an idea that health should be exempt from the normal economic considerations of efficiency and equity. It’s a notion that pushes economic thinking to one side, in the erroneous belief that economics is intrinsically illiberal and dismissive of human welfare. For a country reviewing its healthcare industry, it is useful to take a broad view and consider the whole industry. Only in such a way is there likely to be policy coherence and resulting economic and equity benefits of integration of programs into one system, underpinned by principles which align with the community’s values and priorities.

Setting health priorities

Unless there is an informed community debate, rural health will continue to be squeezed out by organised city-centric interests. You just do not have the lobbying power of the AMA, private health insurance funds, the Australian Pharmacy Guild and hospital interests. But you do have Independents who hold the balance of power in the House of Representatives. The case must be won that choices have to be made and priorities set. It will be a red-letter day in Australia when we have a prime minister, premier or health minister who will publicly say that we can’t have all we want in health. We need to shift the debate away from hot-button issues of more beds, and emergency departments, to the longer-term issues of priorities in spending the health dollar. I happen to think that the major priority areas of need in Australian health are rural health, mental health and Indigenous health. But that is not reflected in informed community debate. The squeaky city wheels get the oil.

Healthcare is rationed on a vast scale. But it is done behind closed doors to the benefit of the powerful and the media savvy. Canberra has 34 full-time lobbyists for every Cabinet minister. They are very influential in determining priorities in government health spending.

Unless the debate is continuously conducted about limited resources and choices, we will always be applying bandaids rather than ensuring genuine long-term reform. The urgent will be addressed rather than the important. In speaking about community engagement – I am not speaking about opinion polling, marketing and focus groups. If that is all we do, we will only get a snap shot at a particular time on community attitudes formed by the West Australian, talk-back radio or hospital vested interests.

We must move beyond this superficial debate of community attitudes. The object must be to educate and inform the community about new ways of doing things. It is about being truthful with the community about what is possible. There are a whole range of ways of doing this where the methodology has been validated – citizens’ juries, town hall meetings and deliberative polling. Country health in Western Australia has had some success. Professor Gavin Mooney will be talking further on this subject. My experience is that when the community is informed and engaged in structured discussions it comes to good decisions about the choices that need to be made and the priorities set. This makes it easier for ministers to make hard decisions when they confront the special interests. This would greatly benefit country people and country patients.

Julia Gillard was derided in the last election campaign for her proposed citizens’ assembly on climate change. But it has the germ of an idea for an informed public discussion and informed government decisions on health spending priorities at every level in Australia – national, state and particularly, local.

Workforce

There is certainly more money in the COAG package for workforce training, although it is largely to do the same things, the same way that we have done for decades. A break-through has been made in nurse-practitioner prescribing and accessing MBS ($59.7 m over four years), and $18.7 m over four years in the budget for the evaluation of the role of nurse practitioners in aged care. Hopefully, we will see many nurse practitioner led clinics being established. In Canberra, such a clinic, established in mid-2010 had 10,000 patients in the first nine months. Other clinics are operating out of pharmacies. There is also $390 m in the budget over four years to assist in the employment of practice nurses. But there are vast areas where we need to restructure work practices. We have tens of thousands of health professionals whose skills are under utilised or undeveloped – nurses, allied health, pharmacists and ambulance officers. We need clinical assistance at almost every clinical level, e.g. a physician assistant. We don’t have so much a shortage of doctors as a misallocation. In 2007 we had 1.5 GPs per 1,000 of population. In other countries it was much lower, NZ 0.8, Canada 1.0, USA 1.0 and UK 0.7. (AIHW, Australian Health, 2010, p.461) We have problems because doctors refuse to share territory with other clinicians, in the name of ‘safety’- a notion that ignores the danger of people finding it difficult to access any services. Auctioning provider numbers by postcode may not be politically do-able, as I suggested at your Albury conference, even though 80% of doctors’ incomes come from the Commonwealth Government. Perhaps we could start by capping the number of new provider numbers in areas already in over-supply.

About 10% of normal births in Australia are managed by midwives. In NZ it is over 90%. We have about 400 nurse practitioners when we should have thousands. The medical colleges have disproportionate influence in controlling access to the professions. Medical training is strongly focused on acute care in hospitals, whereas most of the work of future doctors will be with chronically ill patients in the community. Few are trained to work in team practices and certainly not in country areas. Primary care is not seen as an attractive option for young doctors. Only 13% of final year students have any interest in working in primary care, and only 13% would consider working in rural areas. General practice must be made more attractive and better paid, but not via fee-for-service.

Health is the largest part of the Australian workforce (825,000 in 2008). It is the fastest growing – 23% growth in five years. We are regularly told that we need to improve the productivity of the Australian workforce. Every cocky in every aviary is cackling on about it, but the largest part of the Australian workforce is not mentioned. We have seen the dramatic benefits in productivity improvements through workforce reform on the waterfront. But those gains are small beer compared with the potential gains with health workforce reform, leveraged by such means as wider access to MBS and making all Commonwealth health funding conditional on substantial workforce reform.

Friday, April 1, 2011

SSWAHS = SWSLHN + SLHN and the Medicare Locals - 21

Socartes urges all members of the Southern Highlands community to respond to the future of their health needs by supporting the submission by the SWSHC to DoHA for provision of the South West Sydney Medicare Local. You are encouraged to write to the Federal Minister responsible for the Department of Health and Ageing.

A message from the South West Sydney Health Coalition (SWSHC) - Medicare Locals

What is the solution?

In December 2010, the Australian Government and NSW Government agreed on the boundaries of non-hospital family medicine organisations (Medicare Locals).

There will be one urban, and one rural structure covering the south west Sydney-Macarthur- Southern Highlands region. Together, these two structures will form a Medicare Local.

The SWSHC is a broad alliance of community organisations, health organisations and family doctors leading the transition to a Medicare Local in south west Sydney. The SWSHC supports the structure agreed described in the Medicare Local boundaries:

1. An urban South Western Sydney organisation, based on the amalgamation of the existing Bankstown, Fairfield- Liverpool Divisions, and the urban edge of the Macarthur Division of General Practice.

This organisation will provide services to the urban communities in the Bankstown to Camden corridor, with its large proportion of ethnically diverse residents, and economic disadvantage.

This incorporates the Bankstown, Fairfield, Liverpool, Macarthur and Camden LGAs.

2. A rural Southern Highlands Regional Network based on the current rural section of Macarthur, and the Southern Highlands Divisions of General Practice.

This organisation will focus on provision of non-hospital health services to the rural areas south of Campbelltown and Camden LGAs to Bowral.

The rural Southern Highlands Regional Network will have a separate semi-autonomous local office situated in the Southern Highlands, to manage the specific needs of local families.

What can I do to help?


The South West Sydney Health Coalition now needs your help to secure a healthy future for families in Bankstown, Fairfield, Liverpool, Campbelltown and Camden.

The current round of changes to hospitals and family medicine have created tremendous opportunities for community, health social welfare organisations. Together, we now have a historic opportunity to influence the health of families in south west Sydney for many years into the future. Find out what you can do to shape the future now.

Central DoH&A Office postal address:

Department of Health & Ageing
(Medicare Locals)
GPO Box 9848,
Canberra ACT 2601, Australia

Thursday, March 31, 2011

SSWAHS = SWSLHN + SLHN and the Medicare Locals - 20

First Medicare Local applications accepted, after-hours care funding fast-tracked

22nd Feb 2011
Staff writers all articles by this author

THE Federal Government has today begun accepting applications from GP divisions and primary care organisations to form its new Medicare Locals (MLs).

Meanwhile, new guidelines for establishing MLs, released by Prime Minister Julia Gillard as part of the Invitation to Apply process launch, have been welcomed by the AGPN as further clarifying the roles the new organisations will play in ongoing health reforms.

AGPN chair Dr Emil Djakic said the guidelines announced today by Ms Gillard and Minister for Health and Ageing Nicola Roxon provided "tangible steps for the network as it transitions from the divisions of general practice program" to MLs.

"Now that the [Invitation to Apply] criteria have been released, the divisions of general practice across Australia can work with their partners in the primary health sector to formulate their respective ML proposals," he said.

The praise, however, follows recent criticism by Dr Djakic that the Gillard Government risked stymieing health reform by increasing the number of MLs after the expansion was announced as part of its health reform and funding deal with the states.

Dr Djakic had expressed concerns that raising the number of MLs beyond the planned 57 risked diluting the provision of services, resulting in weaker, less effective organisations.

The Gillard Government has allocated a total of $477 million over four years to establish the national ML network to replace the existing divisions of general practice.

The first group of Medicare Locals is scheduled to begin operating from 1 July.

According to a joint statement by the ministers, the new guidelines aim to provide support to GPs and improve patient care as well as developing locally focused services based on community needs.

Ms Gillard urged primary health care organisations to apply to become MLs through the invitation process.

GPs have meanwhile welcomed the government's announcement that it will fast-track plans to reform funding for after-hours care also announced as part of its health reform agreement with the states.

The changes may entitle practices to receive greater funding for providing after-hours care as the government has delayed the phasing-out of Practice Incentive Program (PIP) payments for after-hours consultations until 2013.

Comments:

ed
22nd Feb 2011
6:10pm

A new name but the same old rubbish that divisions have promoted. The divisions were created to help old GPs find jobs which paid a cushy salary for no work. It also paid useless administrators to draw up programs such as"better communication with aborigines". Treat the aborigine as a human and he bleeds just like anybody.

TIBOR

22nd Feb 2011
7:21pm


The Division of General Practices have unfortunately paved the way for the establishment of the Medicare Locals, with expanded memorandum of understanding, beyond general practice run preventative community activities, with the intended incorporation of wider community representation, pharmacies, nurses and other health sectors.

The Divisions were perceived by the RACGP as having poor managerial abilities and fluctuating general practitioner staff membership. How Locals will implement and improve preventative health measures, access to hopital service and specialist sectors is rather vague. But what is obvious, they will be extensions of the government health departments at more so called specific local levels. But will they be more efficient and cost effective then the present system? To my mind and to others it appears to be another tier, requiring a whole lot of administrators, accountant, employees and governances. It is true the Divisions were fairly useless in their community preventative tasks and no real measurement were undertaken, but I cannot see the Locals doing any better. One of their aims is to provide after hours services. But if the doctors are continually poorly remunerated, then they will not have the workforce. Perhaps they think nurses and phamacists making house call is the answer. I just wonder. No matter what, Divisions are out and Locals are in! The GP's, so called, in this press release, who have been said to apparently 'welcomed the government' announcements' I would like to know their affiliations.

Solidarity

26th Feb 2011
6:33am


"Transition" is a noun. It cannot possibly be a verb.
This quote from Dr Djakic "Now that the [Invitation to Apply] criteria have been released, the divisions of general practice across Australia can work with their partners in the primary health sector to formulate their respective ML proposals," sounds just like Kevinruddspeak . Australians, read "1984" - your Government is wasting every penny to establish dictatorship and call it "freedom" or "better services". Then take to the streets to get rid of these Marxist drones.

ed

28th Feb 2011
7:25pm


News release 2 years in advance: 28 Feb 2013:

Nicola dropped from Cabinet. Applies to WHO for job. Appointed Secretary Useless Projects, WHO by Ban Kee Moon. Now a resident of Geneva. Holds dinner parties for Drs given a Medicare Local. Medicare locals collapse because of a shortage of doctors. Witch doctors from Africa and Barefoot Doctors from China invited to join Nicola's folly

SSWAHS = SWSLHN + SLHN and the Medicare Locals - 19

Doctors want reassurance on Medicare Locals fund-holding

1st Mar 2011
Caroline Brettingham-Moore all articles by this author

THE Gillard Government has come under fire for failing to consult GPs about the fund-holding role of Medicare Locals (MLs), with doctors now calling for reassurances that the new bodies will only be able to directly fund primary care services in cases of “severe market failure”.

Announcing the new guidelines for MLs, Prime Minister Julia Gillard last week flagged the new bodies would evolve to take on a greater fund-holding role.

“I also want to make sure that Medicare Locals over time become fund-holding organisations… so if there isn’t enough of a particular service available, Medicare Locals can make a difference to that,” she said.

AMA president Dr Andrew Pesce voiced concerns that MLs could end up using this type of funding mechanism to fund services that were already adequately provided by GPs via fee-for-service. He added that while the AMA supported fund-holding to provide services where there had been market failure, he was sceptical that MLs would quarantine funds only for such circumstances.

“The fact that the profession wasn’t involved in this discussion makes [the AMA] think that there is a likelihood that fund-holding models are being considered for other services,” Dr Pesce said.

But AGPN chair Dr Emil Djakic disagreed fund-holding would be used broadly by MLs.

“Fee-for-service is a very valuable asset in our system and works very well for a whole range of health issues, but doesn’t serve chronic disease as well as it should,” he said.

“Block funding to fill those gaps and address needs in communities is required.”

Professor Alistair Vickery, chair of the Perth-based Osborne GP Network, said more evidence was needed to determine in which circumstances fund-holding worked before enacting policy.

“We need to find what works and get evidence that a certain funding mechanism improves care,” he said.

Invitations for organisations to apply to become MLs were issued by the Government last week; the first 15 are expected to be operational by 1 July.

Comments:

TIBOR

1st
Mar 2011
7:34pm

It was pretty obvious from the start that MLs were going to be fund-holding models. What surprises me is that the AMA supports it. I wonder if at the grass roots levels within the AMA, that they are aware of the policy. Perhaps they should reconsider their membership.

Under no circumstance should it be introduced, because it will be expanded and there will be no stopping it and fee for service could largely disappear for GPs and Specialists alike. There could become a two tier system, where MLs see the socially disadvantaged and the Private Doctors attended by the more discerning.