This comes literally the day after the Greens announced the same policy. This is excellent news and good policy. It shows that even when they don't win, voting for the Greens is a good move, because it demonstrates the strength of progressive beliefs in this country, and forces Labor to listen to the left.
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And their polocy is to add dental to Medicare
Vote #Green!
And mental health.
Super good news and policy. It feels like a splash (rather than a drop) in the bucket for the cost of living though.
Surely a decent housing policy has to be next.
Yeah, it's about time they started funding healthcare more, it's been allowed to get way too underfunded.
I always find it fascinating how Australia shares our (UK) exact problems despite being on the opposite side of the globe.
Neoliberalism and conservatism is failing everywhere, because it's a universal fallacy.
lol, lmao even.
Doing (presumably) good policy when it's good politics is at least better than not doing it at all, but you're right in that if it was really something they thought was important, they could've already been working on implementing it since they were already in government X_X
I'm not super versed in Medicare billing, but what I do know is doctors can set their own rates, for which part is covered by medicare, and rates have been going up faster than rebates.
There has definitely been price gouging, because shopping around on GP visits is a pain, and often people just cop it.
It's been years since you've been able to get bulk billing within like 7 km from Melbourne CBD.
Some of it is genuine cost of living increases, but there still doesn't seem to be any mechanism to control prices other than the "free market"
The medical centre we had on the Gold Coast bulk billed, it also operated 7 days a week and we could walk there and often get a same day apoinment or next day at worse.
Didn't really appreicate it until i moved to Tassie 2 yeaes ago and a 10min phone appointment costs me $140 and I have to book a fortnight in advance and they shut all sorts of hours fir the occasional visit.
Here's a crazy idea, we could just employ health workers directly. Cut out the practice owners making a profit/charging rent to the doctors practicing out of their location.
Just not make the insane mistake the UK made by not paying health workers competitively. There's a reason we have so many ex-NHS staff working in Australia, lol
We are super wealthy per capita by international standards, we could absolutely afford it. (If we bothered taxing the multinationals shipping our minerals overseas...)
An election promise, that's 5 years away, if they deliver it. At which point they might not even get back in. This is called a pipedream promise, to get elected.
Would always be nice for it to be immediate but at the very least the increase in funding starts in the first year. Probably some budget reasons but can't say I know enough about that to say.
In other words complete bullshit until proven otherwise