AMA Co-payment Model Released

By Petrina Smith
Thursday, 21 August, 2014


AMA presidentAMA President, A/Prof Brian Owler, has announced the AMA  Co-payment model, calling it a health policy, not an economic policy.
The AMA has been working to produce the alternative model since the Government's Co-payment proposal was announced on Budget night.
“The AMA has produced a health policy, not an economic policy,” A/Prof Owler said. “Our model is based on the realities of day-to-day medical practice, and our objective is to provide higher quality primary care for all Australians.
“The AMA co-payment model protects vulnerable patients in the community, values general practice to encourage quality care and support prevention and chronic disease management, and it also sends a price signal for non-concession patients."
The AMA has knocked 85 cents off the Government's co-payment plan, promosing a  minimum $6.15 co-payment. The AMA says this aligns with the current bulk billing incentive and that applies to all patients. The Government will pay the co-payment for concession card holders and patients under 16 years of age.
“Under our model, there will be no cut to the Medicare patient rebate, and there is an incentive for general practices to collect the co-payment.
“The AMA has long supported well-designed and well-intentioned co-payments, and that is what we are releasing today.
“Co-payments already exist. About 20 per cent of GP visits currently attract a co-payment.
“The AMA co-payment model allows GPs the opportunity to spend more time with their patients, provide preventive health care and chronic disease management, and place a value on the essential service they provide.
“It maximises the benefits of high quality primary care in general practice, keeping people well, and keeping people out of more expensive hospital care.
“We are confident that our co-payment model will stimulate robust debate in the community, in the political arena, and in the health sector, and remind the Government of the unfairness, inequity, and electoral unpopularity of its Budget co-payment proposals,” A/Prof Owler said

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