Michael Smith
The federal government is considering introducing fixed prices for operations and other services in the country’s 650 private hospitals under a raft of proposals designed to fix the sector, and has told key players it is willing to let more hospitals close rather than prop up inefficient operations.
Health Department Secretary Blair Comley told a meeting of top health industry chief executives in Canberra on Friday there were more private hospital beds in Australia than the country needed.
He indicated the government was unlikely to offer a quick fix before a federal election, with any recommendations coming out of Health Minister Mark Butler’s inquiry into the $22 billion sector likely to skew towards the longer term.
One option discussed on Friday was the adoption of a ‘‘national efficient price’’ to set a baseline price for services, a model used in the public system. The price-fixing mechanism could replace existing complex arrangements where hundreds of insurers and private hospitals individually negotiate funding arrangements.
The idea has already split the industry, with some support from not-for-profit hospitals, but it would probably be resisted by bigger players such as Ramsay Health Care. Doctors are neutral.
Recommendations from the Health Department’s two-month review into the viability of the country’s 650 private hospitals are not yet public and are due to be sent to Mr Butler shortly.
The government is under pressure to help a system regarded as being inefficient, but also a critical part of the healthcare system, a major employer and a key driver of economic activity. Regional areas are particularly sensitive to the government.
The review has also exposed the inability of hospital operators and health insurers to work together to fix the system. St Vincent’s earlier this year threatened to walk away from its funding contract with insurer NIB before a new deal was brokered last week.
While hospitals had been lobbying the government to force insurers to tip more funding in, people who attended the meeting said that seemed to be off the table.
They said the mood among the hospitals was ‘‘grim’’ after the meeting, which was attended by Ramsay’s Australian boss Carmel Monaghan, Healthscope chief Greg Horan, Medibank Private boss David Koczkar, Calvary Health Care national chief Martin Bowles, HBF Health chief Lachlan Henderson, and a representative from the Australian Medical Association.
Mr Comley would not tell the meeting what the recommendations were, but in a slide presentation he outlined the challenges the government had identified. He said the government was aware that the closure of maternity and mental health beds was eroding the value of private health cover for families.
The government has also made it clear to industry players that private hospitals in regional areas are essential and could be given special consideration.
But with only six weeks of parliament left before the end of the year and an election looming, few were confident Mr Butler’s inquiry would provide any meaningful solution in the current term of government.
It is understood the AMA has told the government it feels the process should be the first step for broader reform.
Mr Butler’s office declined to comment.
Industry predictions vary, but about 70 private hospitals have closed since 2019. Independent analysis suggests there has only been a net reduction of four when openings are factored in.
Mr Butler launched the inquiry in June due to concerns that more hospitals could close, forcing more patients into an already stretched public system.
Insurance industry body Private Healthcare Australia took the rare step of singling out Healthscope, the country’s second-largest operator owned by Canada’s Brook-field, for criticism. Healthscope is in talks with lenders to restructure its $1.6 billion debt load.
‘‘Health funds will certainly not use their members’ money to increase profits for foreign private equity firms like Brookfield, the owner of Healthscope Hospitals,’’ PHA chief executive Rachel David said. ‘‘Brookfield is managing more than $1 trillion in assets. They can afford to bail themselves out of some bad business decisions in Australia.’’
Healthscope responded by saying that three-quarters of Australia’s private hospitals were losing money due to a surge in cost inflation, wage rises for nurses and hospital staff, and escalating energy and supplier costs, which had created an ‘‘industry-wide viability crisis’’.
‘‘Australia has one of the most efficient private healthcare systems in the world,’’ a Healthscope spokesman said. ‘‘The claim it can be solved by finding more efficiencies is, at best, deliberately uninformed and, at worst, dangerous.
‘‘Hospital operators will never take risks with clinical care and patient safety.’’
Terry Barnes, a former health adviser to the Howard government, said insurers should not be asked to help inefficient hospitals.
‘‘If operators and their backers run inefficient facilities, or sink their own money into costly and unprofitable white elephants, insurers and insured shouldn’t carry the can for operators’ poor management decisions through inflated premiums and out-of-contract patient costs,’’ he said in an opinion piece published by The Australian Financial Review.
Medibank, Australia’s largest health insurer, says only 64 per cent of private hospital beds are being utilised.