Medical services for war
veterans harder to access despite fee increases, Australia
02 Sep 2004
The AMA (Australian Medical Association) welcomes the
Government’s acknowledgement that fees for GPs who treat
veterans under the Local Medical Officer (LMO) Scheme are
inadequate but says the fee rises announced today will do little
to encourage GPs to stay in the scheme and will fail to deliver
proper care to veterans.
AMA President, Dr Bill Glasson, said the new fees for the LMO
scheme are only slightly above the Medicare Plus incentives for
some patients in some areas of $5.00 and $7.50 and do not allow
for the longer more complex GP consultations needed to care for
the serious and multiple health problems encountered by
veterans.
“The LMO is supposed to provide veterans with Rolls Royce
medical services but is only delivering P76 services,” Dr
Glasson said.
“AMA surveys of doctors who treat veterans show clearly that
veterans’ health schemes - the LMO Scheme for GPs and the RPPS
for specialists - are not being funded well enough to deliver
the quality of care promised to veterans,” Dr Glasson said.
An August 2004 AMA poll of medical specialists shows that more
doctors will drop out of the Repatriation Private Patient Scheme
(RPPS) altogether or cut back on the number of veterans they
treat despite fee increases promised from 1 July 2005 in the
2004-05 Federal Budget.
Under the RPPS, the Government promises veterans with Gold Cards
free access to private specialist medical care by doctors in
private hospitals and in doctors’ rooms.
AMA President, Dr Bill Glasson, said today that the Budget fee
increases of 15 per cent for consultations and 20 per cent for
procedures are still not keeping up with the cost of providing
the quality of service that veterans need and deserve.
“Our war veterans are getting older, their health is
deteriorating, and many are suffering from multiple ailments,”
Dr Glasson said.
“They need more frequent visits to specialists and they require
longer consultations.”
The AMA poll received 1837 responses from specialists who
currently treat veterans under the RPPS Australia-wide.
Key national findings include:
-- 73 per cent will continue to treat veterans following the
government's decision to increase fees from 1 Jan 2005 under the
RPPS
-- 25 per cent are considering cutting back on the number of
veterans that they treat under the RPPS
-- two per cent are definitely going to withdraw from the RPPS
• all up, 27 per cent of specialists are going to reduce the
number of veterans they see or withdraw completely from the RPPS.
Dr Glasson said the situation for war veterans in Tasmania is
far worse than the national trend.
A total of 61 Tasmanian specialists who treat veterans under the
RPPS responded.
Key poll findings for Tasmania include:
-- 56 per cent say they will continue to treat veterans under
the RPPS
-- 31 per cent are considering cutting back on the number of
veterans they treat under the RPPS
-- 13 per cent are definitely going to withdraw from the RPPS
-- all up, 44 per cent of Tasmanian specialists are going to
reduce the number of veterans they see or withdraw completely
from the RPPS.
Dr Glasson said there are particular problems in orthopaedics
and urology in Tasmania due primarily to medical workforce
shortages in that State.
“We are told that a number of specialists have already departed
the scene in Tasmania, and the Department of Veterans’ Affairs
(DVA) is already starting to fly vets to the mainland for
treatment.
“The poll shows the beginnings of a major national problem for
the health care of war veterans if the Tasmanian situation is
any indicator.
“The medical workforce shortages are being felt all over the
country and cannot be reversed in the short term.
“You simply cannot train and deploy a highly skilled medical
workforce overnight.
“Our poll shows that the RPPS will fail to provide the promised
quality of specialist care to our war veterans in the same way
that the Local Medical Officer (LMO) Scheme is failing to
provide appropriate general practice services to vets.
“These results send a clear signal that the Government and the
DVA must have a long hard look at the RPPS and LMO Schemes to
ensure our cherished war veterans get the quality of medical
care they truly deserve.
“They fought for us. Let’s fight for them,” Dr Glasson said.
2 September 2004
CONTACT:
John Flannery
(02) 6270 5477 / (0419) 494 761
http://www.ama.com.au |