The impact of differences in bulk-billing rates: strategies for greater equity in Medicare

IF 8.5 2区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL Medical Journal of Australia Pub Date : 2025-01-05 DOI:10.5694/mja2.52580
Sebastian P Rosenberg, Ian B Hickie
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Consequently, people living in remote and socio-economically disadvantaged areas are still likely to be spending larger proportions of their incomes on out-of-pocket fees for primary care health services.<span><sup>1</sup></span></p><p>The federal government has recognised the need for solutions to this problem. It increased the bulk-billing incentives for general practitioners in rural and remote areas in January 2022, and subsequently tripled them in November 2023.<span><sup>2</sup></span> Nevertheless, Saxby and Zhang found that people pay a mean of $43 for non-bulk-billed general practitioner visits, more than the triple bonus, which means that these incentives are unlikely to be sufficient to reduce out-of-pocket costs, particularly for people in metropolitan areas, where the bonus payments are lowest.<span><sup>1</sup></span></p><p>Our own research has found both steep increases and major differences in out-of-pocket costs for health care in Australia.<span><sup>2</sup></span> Our findings and those of Saxby and Zhang are consistent with those regarding other critical areas of health care.<span><sup>3</sup></span> Using bulk-billing rates as a proxy measure of “good care” is inappropriate and misleading. A key limitation of the analysis by Saxby and Zhang is that they could not consider patient needs. In mental health, the paradox of psychological distress and service use has been understood for some time; that is, we know that more services are provided where they are needed least.<span><sup>4</sup></span></p><p>Three key questions must be addressed if we are to reduce growing inequities in Medicare. The first concerns limitations associated with relying on fees for service as our primary payment mechanism, particularly for people with complex needs. Medicare funds teamwork poorly. Sending a young woman with an eating disorder to a psychologist for fifteen (partially subsidised) sessions is unlikely to achieve long term benefits. Instead, in addition to the psychologist, she would probably profit from care provided by a team comprising a general practitioner, a nurse, a dietitian, a psychiatrist and allied health workers, helping her stay connected with school, work, friends, and family.<span><sup>5</sup></span> Australia must diversify its funding models to provide effective incentives for professionals to work together effectively. For many conditions, these professionals would span clinical, medical, and psychosocial elements of care.</p><p>The second key question concerns the overall absence of workforce design and role delineation. General practice, and primary care more broadly, are under significant financial and demand pressures. Taking mental health care as an example, the role we want general practitioners to play should be discussed.<span><sup>6</sup></span> They often function as primary gatekeepers to more specialised care options, but they should be trained, supported, and reimbursed to play broader roles as providers of more complex, team-based care.</p><p>The splitting of responsibility for health care funding between federal and state governments means that neither is responsible for community-based and more specialised care.<span><sup>7</sup></span> Ready, affordable access to ongoing specialist clinical support in the community is rare, leaving many general practitioners unsupported. Evidence-based roles have been trialled but not implemented to maximum effect.<span><sup>8</sup></span> The level of unmet need is alarming.<span><sup>9</sup></span></p><p>As Henry Ford is said to have remarked, “If you always do what you've always done, you'll always get what you've always got.” Reducing the lumpy distribution of the professional workforce in Australia will begin with a frank discussion about which professionals need to do what and how they can work together.<span><sup>10</sup></span></p><p>A third critical factor for greater equity is that teams of professionals providing ongoing, complex care need a new, technology-driven spine. Such systems permit real time information sharing, promote measurement-based care, and can support evidence-based adjunct services. Active, rapid feedback can be derived from patient-reported outcomes. Health planning still operates in a siloed, top–down fashion from capital cities, despite the availability of alternative models.<span><sup>11</sup></span> It fails to reflect local community concerns, which even in outer metropolitan areas can be quite different from those in the inner city.</p><p>Notwithstanding the problems discussed here and by Saxby and Zhang, equity in health care in Australia remains both desirable and achievable. The authors’ findings reinforce concerns that Australians find it increasingly difficult to have even their most basic health care needs met. For people facing disadvantages such as poverty or not living in a metropolitan area, these difficulties increase further as the opportunity to see a general practitioner dwindles. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In this issue of the MJA, Saxby and Zhang1 provide more evidence about the limits of Medicare as a universal public health insurance scheme, highlighting deep inequities that mean that access to general practice-based Medicare services depends less on your needs than on where you live.

The authors provide some reassurance in that they report that bulk-billing rates are higher in the most socio-economically disadvantaged regions of Australia (86%) than in the least socio-economically disadvantaged (73%). However, they also identified that mean out-of-pocket costs for general practice services are substantial in many areas, including disadvantaged regions and remote areas. Consequently, people living in remote and socio-economically disadvantaged areas are still likely to be spending larger proportions of their incomes on out-of-pocket fees for primary care health services.1

The federal government has recognised the need for solutions to this problem. It increased the bulk-billing incentives for general practitioners in rural and remote areas in January 2022, and subsequently tripled them in November 2023.2 Nevertheless, Saxby and Zhang found that people pay a mean of $43 for non-bulk-billed general practitioner visits, more than the triple bonus, which means that these incentives are unlikely to be sufficient to reduce out-of-pocket costs, particularly for people in metropolitan areas, where the bonus payments are lowest.1

Our own research has found both steep increases and major differences in out-of-pocket costs for health care in Australia.2 Our findings and those of Saxby and Zhang are consistent with those regarding other critical areas of health care.3 Using bulk-billing rates as a proxy measure of “good care” is inappropriate and misleading. A key limitation of the analysis by Saxby and Zhang is that they could not consider patient needs. In mental health, the paradox of psychological distress and service use has been understood for some time; that is, we know that more services are provided where they are needed least.4

Three key questions must be addressed if we are to reduce growing inequities in Medicare. The first concerns limitations associated with relying on fees for service as our primary payment mechanism, particularly for people with complex needs. Medicare funds teamwork poorly. Sending a young woman with an eating disorder to a psychologist for fifteen (partially subsidised) sessions is unlikely to achieve long term benefits. Instead, in addition to the psychologist, she would probably profit from care provided by a team comprising a general practitioner, a nurse, a dietitian, a psychiatrist and allied health workers, helping her stay connected with school, work, friends, and family.5 Australia must diversify its funding models to provide effective incentives for professionals to work together effectively. For many conditions, these professionals would span clinical, medical, and psychosocial elements of care.

The second key question concerns the overall absence of workforce design and role delineation. General practice, and primary care more broadly, are under significant financial and demand pressures. Taking mental health care as an example, the role we want general practitioners to play should be discussed.6 They often function as primary gatekeepers to more specialised care options, but they should be trained, supported, and reimbursed to play broader roles as providers of more complex, team-based care.

The splitting of responsibility for health care funding between federal and state governments means that neither is responsible for community-based and more specialised care.7 Ready, affordable access to ongoing specialist clinical support in the community is rare, leaving many general practitioners unsupported. Evidence-based roles have been trialled but not implemented to maximum effect.8 The level of unmet need is alarming.9

As Henry Ford is said to have remarked, “If you always do what you've always done, you'll always get what you've always got.” Reducing the lumpy distribution of the professional workforce in Australia will begin with a frank discussion about which professionals need to do what and how they can work together.10

A third critical factor for greater equity is that teams of professionals providing ongoing, complex care need a new, technology-driven spine. Such systems permit real time information sharing, promote measurement-based care, and can support evidence-based adjunct services. Active, rapid feedback can be derived from patient-reported outcomes. Health planning still operates in a siloed, top–down fashion from capital cities, despite the availability of alternative models.11 It fails to reflect local community concerns, which even in outer metropolitan areas can be quite different from those in the inner city.

Notwithstanding the problems discussed here and by Saxby and Zhang, equity in health care in Australia remains both desirable and achievable. The authors’ findings reinforce concerns that Australians find it increasingly difficult to have even their most basic health care needs met. For people facing disadvantages such as poverty or not living in a metropolitan area, these difficulties increase further as the opportunity to see a general practitioner dwindles. Most Australians associate Medicare with equity and fairness; the findings of Saxby and Zhang challenge this association.

No relevant disclosures.

Commissioned; not externally peer reviewed.

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批量计费费率差异的影响:提高医疗保险公平性的策略。
在本期MJA中,Saxby和Zhang1提供了更多关于医疗保险作为一项全民公共健康保险计划的局限性的证据,强调了深刻的不平等,这意味着获得基于一般实践的医疗保险服务与其说取决于你的需求,不如说取决于你住在哪里。作者提供了一些保证,因为他们报告说,在澳大利亚社会经济最不利的地区(86%),批量计费率高于社会经济最不利的地区(73%)。然而,他们还发现,在许多地区,包括弱势地区和偏远地区,普通医疗服务的平均自付费用很高。因此,生活在偏远地区和社会经济不利地区的人们仍然可能将其收入的较大比例用于初级保健保健服务的自付费用。联邦政府已经认识到需要解决这个问题。2022年1月,政府增加了对农村和偏远地区全科医生的批量计费奖励,随后在2023年11月增加了两倍。然而,萨克斯比和张发现,人们为非批量计费的全科医生就诊平均支付43美元,超过了三倍的奖金,这意味着这些奖励不太可能足以降低自付费用,特别是对于那些奖金支付最低的大都市地区的人们。我们自己的研究发现,在澳大利亚,自付医疗费用的急剧增长和巨大差异。我们的发现以及Saxby和Zhang的发现与其他关键医疗领域的发现是一致的使用批量计费费率作为“良好护理”的代理衡量标准是不恰当和误导的。Saxby和Zhang的分析的一个关键限制是他们没有考虑病人的需求。在精神卫生方面,人们对心理困扰和服务使用之间的矛盾已经了解了一段时间;也就是说,我们知道在最不需要的地方提供了更多的服务。如果我们要减少医疗保险中日益严重的不平等,就必须解决三个关键问题。第一个问题涉及依赖服务收费作为主要支付机制的局限性,特别是对于有复杂需求的人。医疗保险对团队合作的资助很差。将一个患有饮食失调症的年轻女性送到心理医生那里进行15次(部分补贴)治疗不太可能获得长期的好处。相反,除了心理医生,她可能还会受益于一个由全科医生、护士、营养师、精神科医生和联合健康工作者组成的团队提供的护理,帮助她与学校、工作、朋友和家人保持联系澳大利亚必须使其资助模式多样化,以便为专业人员有效地合作提供有效的激励。对于许多情况,这些专业人员将涵盖临床、医学和心理社会方面的护理。第二个关键问题涉及劳动力设计和角色描述的总体缺失。一般做法和更广泛的初级保健面临着巨大的财政和需求压力。以精神卫生保健为例,我们希望全科医生发挥的作用应该得到讨论他们通常是更专业的护理选择的主要看门人,但他们应该得到培训、支持和报销,以发挥更广泛的作用,成为更复杂的团队护理的提供者。联邦政府和州政府对卫生保健资金的责任划分意味着两者都不负责以社区为基础的和更专业的护理在社区中,很少有现成的、负担得起的专科临床支持,这使得许多全科医生得不到支持。以证据为基础的角色已经试行,但尚未发挥最大效果未满足需求的程度令人震惊。据说亨利·福特曾经说过:“如果你总是做你一直在做的事情,你将永远得到你一直得到的东西。”要减少澳大利亚专业劳动力的不均匀分布,首先要坦率地讨论哪些专业人员需要做什么,以及他们如何合作。实现更大公平的第三个关键因素是,提供持续复杂护理的专业团队需要一种新的、由技术驱动的脊柱。这种系统允许实时信息共享,促进基于测量的护理,并可以支持基于证据的辅助服务。积极、快速的反馈可以从患者报告的结果中得到。11 .尽管有其他模式可供选择,但卫生规划仍然以孤立的、自上而下的方式从首都城市运作它未能反映当地社区的关切,即使在大都市外围地区,也可能与内城有很大的不同。尽管存在本文和Saxby和Zhang讨论的问题,澳大利亚的医疗保健公平仍然是可取的和可实现的。 作者的研究结果加剧了人们的担忧,即澳大利亚人发现,即使是最基本的医疗保健需求也越来越难以得到满足。对于那些面临贫困或不住在大都市等不利条件的人来说,随着看全科医生的机会减少,这些困难会进一步增加。大多数澳大利亚人将医疗保险与公平和公平联系在一起;Saxby和Zhang的发现挑战了这种联系。无相关披露。没有外部同行评审。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Medical Journal of Australia
Medical Journal of Australia 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
5.30%
发文量
410
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Medical Journal of Australia (MJA) stands as Australia's foremost general medical journal, leading the dissemination of high-quality research and commentary to shape health policy and influence medical practices within the country. Under the leadership of Professor Virginia Barbour, the expert editorial team at MJA is dedicated to providing authors with a constructive and collaborative peer-review and publication process. Established in 1914, the MJA has evolved into a modern journal that upholds its founding values, maintaining a commitment to supporting the medical profession by delivering high-quality and pertinent information essential to medical practice.
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