scholarly journals Recent estimates of the out-of-pocket expenditure on health care in Australia

2020 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 340 ◽  
Author(s):  
Farhat Yusuf ◽  
Stephen Leeder

Objective The aims of this study were to estimate the average annual out-of-pocket (OOP) expenditure on health care by households in Australia in 2015–16, and to compare this with the estimate for 2009–10. Methods Data from the most recent Household Expenditure Survey (HES) conducted by the Australian Bureau of Statistics were used. Various statistical methods were used to estimate the annual OOP expenditures at the household and national levels. Results The average annual OOP expenditure was A$4290 per household, representing 5.8% of the amount spent on all goods and services. Private health insurance (PHI) premiums, although not a direct expenditure on health care, were 40.6% of the total OOP expenses. Of the remaining 59.4%, nearly half was spent on doctors and other health professionals, and approximately one-third was spent on medicines. Dental treatments and specialist consultations were the most expensive, whereas visits to general practitioners incurred the least OOP expenditure. Households with PHI (58.6%) spent fourfold more on health care than those not insured. Compared with the 2009–10 survey, the biggest increases were in the cost of PHI (50.7%) and copayments to specialists (34.8%) and other health professionals (42.0%). Conclusions OOP expenditure on health care as a proportion of the total household expenditure on all goods and services has increased by more than 25% between 2009–10 and 2015–16. What is known about the topic? Australian households incur OOP expenses for health care in Australia for a wide range of goods and services, such as copayments to doctors and other health professionals beyond the Medicare rebates, the cost of medicines and other pharmaceutical goods not covered entirely by the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme and PHI premiums. Although other estimates of OOP expenditure are available in official reports of the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, they are based on administrative records rather than consumer reports, and cannot be disaggregated by item or the characteristics of households. What does this paper add? This paper provides detailed information on OOP expenditure on health care as reported by a probability sample of households interviewed for the HES conducted by the ABS during 2015–16. These estimates of OOP expenditure, based on consumer reports, add a further dimension to the information available from administrative records only. What are the implications for practitioners? Practitioners should take account of the effect of increasing copayments for their services, especially on patients belonging to the lower socioeconomic categories. Increasing copayments may lead to people foregoing medical care. Health planners and politicians should note the steady upward drift in OOP expenses and factor these into their policies for future funding of health care.

Author(s):  
Traolach S. Brugha

Where treatment and health care is no longer able to bring relief and improve functioning, social care should take over. In this chapter, we discuss the development of social care in the context of adult autism, and the range of its concerns and interests is considered. The key role of the social worker, particularly as a broker of social care, is developed. Health professionals define the need for reasonable adjustments to assessed disability, and the content of a personal passport, summarizing individual’s needs. Health professionals also have a key role in risk management, although the social worker may have a key co-ordinating role. A wide range of contexts for social care within and beyond health care is considered. The distinction between individual need and care planning, and the role of the wider society, which will be covered in Chapter 14, concludes this chapter.


2020 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 275-296
Author(s):  
Joshua J. Bon ◽  
Bernard Baffour ◽  
Melanie Spallek ◽  
Michele Haynes

AbstractContingency tables provide a convenient format to publish summary data from confidential survey and administrative records that capture a wide range of social and economic information. By their nature, contingency tables enable aggregation of potentially sensitive data, limiting disclosure of identifying information. Furthermore, censoring or perturbation can be used to desensitise low cell counts when they arise. However, access to detailed cross-classified tables for research is often restricted by data custodians when too many censored or perturbed cells are required to preserve privacy. In this article, we describe a framework for selecting and combining log-linear models when accessible data is restricted to overlapping marginal contingency tables. The approach is demonstrated through application to housing transition data from the Australian Census Longitudinal Data set provided by the Australian Bureau of Statistics.


Complementary therapies 154 Regulation and training 156 Complementary therapies are gaining popularity with both the public and health professionals and as a result are finding a more substantial place in a number of areas of mainstream health care provision. One of these areas is that of cancer care. Patients are accessing a wide range of therapies including acupuncture, homeopathy, aromatherapy, reflexology, and massage. Complementary therapies are used in addition to, and complementing, conventional therapies for cancer or other illnesses. Increasingly, the term ...


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary Metcalf ◽  
Karen Rossie ◽  
Katie Sokes ◽  
Bradley Tanner

BACKGROUND The growth of e-cigarette devices, after their initial promotion as safer alternatives to traditional cigarettes, brought about a disturbing trend of youth vaping. Vaping by youth increased recent years and peaking in 2019 with 27.5% of high school students vaping [1–3]. Daily vaping declined for youths the next year by 7 to 9%, but over 3.6 million youths still reported current vaping in a national survey(Miech et. Al, 2020). For adults, vaping devices were often used as treatment alternatives for smoking cessation instead of FDA-approved options[4]. Health professional training and skills development is needed to prevent and address patient vaping and e-cigarette use. OBJECTIVE Develop an understanding of training needs that would help a wide range of health professionals prevent and address vaping and e-cigarette use by their patients. The ultimate goal was to develop online training for health providers focused on vaping/e-cigarette cessation, in a continuing education/continuing medical education format. METHODS We conducted an extensive literature review focused on aspects of vaping/e-cigarette relevant to clinical care. Using the review and our experience as educators on substance abuse, we created an online survey about clinical skills needed in the area of vaping and e-cigarettes, which was completed by two groups of health professionals: 1)self-identified experts on vaping and 2)practicing health professionals who did not self-identify as having expertise. Additionally, we conducted a focus group of clinical staff at an in-patient psychiatric hospital. Finally, we solicited feedback from addiction cessation educators. RESULTS Health professional participants showed a strong interest in the training topics. The top 3 topics of interest were: • Recommended treatments for patients who vape or use e-cigarettes. • How to evaluate and treat health effects in patients who vape or use e-cigarettes. • How to provide brief interventions for patients who vape THC. Interestingly, area of expertise or medical specialty influenced opinion of topic importance. For example, self-identified experts more strongly supported the need for prevention strategies in comparison to other health care professionals. In contrast, health care professionals were far more interested in the “health effects of second-hand vaping” than were the experts. In addition, focus group of in-patient medical staff were more interested in the outcomes of EVALI and the pharmacology of THC than were the other groups. CONCLUSIONS The needs analysis results support interest in clinical skills training related to vaping cessation by health professionals, and provide specific guidance on which topics are most needed. Health professional education on vaping is needed, wanted, and area of practice impacts topic interest significantly.


2012 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin McKee ◽  
David Stuckler

<p>The current economic crisis in Europe has challenged the basis of the economic model that currently prevails in much of the industrialised world. It has revealed a system that is managed not for the benefit of the people but rather for corporations and the small elite who lead them and which is clearly unsustainable in its present form. Yet, there is a hidden consequence of this system: an unfolding crisis in health care, driven by the greed of corporations whose profit-seeking model is also failing. Proponents of commodifying healthcare simultaneously argue that the cost of providing care for ageing populations is unaffordable while working to create demand for their health care products among those who are essentially healthy. Will healthcare be the next profit-fuelled investor bubble? In this paper we call on health professionals to heed the warnings from the economic crisis and, rather than stand by while a crisis unfolds, act now to redirect increasingly market-oriented health systems to serve the common good.</p>


1987 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cindy C. Wilson ◽  
F. Ellen Netting

Perceptions of 269 community-based elderly persons and eighty health-care professionals were compared for opinions related to the health-care needs of the elderly, and major barriers faced by the elderly to the utilization of health services. The data indicate a high degree of incongruence between the perceptions of the elderly and those of the professionals. Health professionals were not good predictors of the health status of the elderly, and they did not accurately predict the barriers faced by the elderly seeking health care. Congruence of responses was found only related to the cost of health services. Reasons for these differences were explored, and recommendations for future program planning were made.


2004 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 235-243 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ravi Narayan ◽  
Claudio Schuftan

AbstractThe People's Health Assembly and the People's Health Movement have been a civil society effort to counter the ill effects of globalization on health and health care. The Assembly, through an interactive dialogue, developed the People's Charter for Health as a tool for advocacy and a call for radical action. Consisting of a wide range of action initiatives, the People's Charter for Health, now translated into over forty languages, is helping to promote a movement that involves geographical circles of health professionals and activists that organize street-level rallies, policy debates and dialogues, and public education. The movement's advocacy efforts with the WHO and other major international health players and health campaigns are all focused on the goal of "Health for All—Now!"


2001 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 103-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip Musgrove

A doctor need not learn a great deal of economics in order to understand some of the basic ideas of health economics. What is more important than any particular piece of knowledge is to understand how economists think, particularly how and why they think about markets. Health economics emphasizes some market failures which lead to poor health outcomes or high costs or both, and it concentrates especially on issues of how health care is paid for - the sources of funding, the pooling of those funds to provide protection from financial risk, and their use to purchase goods and services. Better understanding between economists and health professionals can reduce incomprehension and antagonism, and offer opportunities for more efficient and equitable health systems.


2019 ◽  
Vol 185 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 499-505
Author(s):  
Chris Gibbs ◽  
Barbara Murphy ◽  
Kate Hoppe ◽  
Patricia Clarke ◽  
Deepika Ratnaike ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction Military personnel and veterans can have higher rates of mental health problems than the general population, but are no more likely to receive appropriate mental health care. A lack of experience among Australia’s mental health workforce in treating veteran-specific issues has been identified, pointing to a need for strategies to strengthen the workforce capacity. To this end, the Department of Veteran’s Affairs joined with the Mental Health Professionals Network (MHPN) to produce and deliver a series of veteran-specific webinars for health professionals working with military personnel, veterans and their families. Materials and Method Five webinars were produced and delivered between August 2016 and July 2017. Each involved a panel of health professionals with content expertise and was facilitated by a nationally recognized expert in veteran mental health. Each webinar was evaluated using an online survey to address whether learning needs were achieved, likely improvements to work practice, and improvements in knowledge of and confidence in treating veteran mental health issues. Results Of the 5,127 attendees across the five webinars, registration data was collected for 4,809 (94%) and post-webinar data for 3,334 (70%) of registrants. Of these, over 90% indicated that their learning objectives were achieved, that the content was relevant to their practice, and that their work practices would be improved as a result of their participation. Further, almost three quarters reported increased knowledge and skills, and two-thirds increased confidence in treating veterans’ mental health needs. Conclusions The Veterans’ webinar series was effective in engaging a large number and a wide range of professionals working in mental health care in Australia, underscoring the strength of MHPN’s initiatives in terms of scale and reach. With its emphasis on interdisciplinary practice and collaborative care, MHPN is well-placed to continue to support Australia’s mental health workforce.


1983 ◽  
Vol 3 (4_suppl) ◽  
pp. 12-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dennis M. Dailey

The renal failure patient is likely to experience a wide range of sex related concerns and/or serious sexual dysfunctions. This aspect of patient care is largely overlooked or avoided by health care professionals, usually because of attitude, knowledge, and skill deficits of the caregivers. This paper offers suggestions to prepare health professionals for competent intervention, in order that they may provide a more complete service to these patients and their partners.


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