Items funded by the government through the MBS include things like consultations with doctors or specialists, tests including X-rays and MRI scans, eye tests, psychology sessions and some allied health services.
The report found there were barriers preventing “innovative approaches” from being used in the health system, including lack of data, the process for reviewing and introducing new technology and approaches to new models of treatment.
To help Australia keep pace, both with medical research and practice, the taskforce recommended the creation of a national institute for health research “to deliver system-wide change”.
One of the taskforce’s key recommendations was to shift away from reliance on the fee-for-service model and complement it with with blended or block payment models to support “more clinically appropriate” patient care.
“[This would] encourage more efficient, coordinated care with a greater focus on preventative health and better management of chronic conditions to deliver better outcomes for patients,” the report said.
It also said the relative values of rebates should be reviewed. Aligning rebates to the length of patient contact would be “an appropriate and fair approach,” the report said.
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Key recommendations also included ensuring there would be a consumer-centric focus, improved monitoring and data collection, and continuous reviews to ensure safe, high quality and value care was being provided through the MBS.
The taskforce made more than 1400 recommendations aimed at strengthening and modernising the public healthcare system.
In its final report, the taskforce said it had been consciously ambitious in its approach, seizing “this unique opportunity” to recommend changes that would modernise the system “at all levels”.
The report also pointed out the system would need continuous review and reform.
In its five-year review of the more than 5700 MBS items, the taskforce has produced more than 60 reports and made more than 1400 recommendations. To date, the government has agreed to implement 520 of those recommendations.
A spokesman for Health Minister Greg Hunt said: “This is a report to government and not of government, and we will now consider, consult and respond as we have done throughout the course of the review in relation to all previous proposals.”
Rachel Clun is a federal political reporter at The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, covering health.
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