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AMA being heard over the medical indemnity concerns

AMA President Dr Michael Gannon used his National Press Club address to assure doctors and patients alike that he was keeping the issue of medical indemnity at the forefront of his discussions with political leaders.

He said medical indemnity was an area of great concern to the medical profession that has recently re-emerged.

“Some of you may remember the indemnity crisis more than a decade ago. The reforms and protections put in place by then Health Minister Tony Abbott are showing signs of stress,” Dr Gannon said.

“While back in the UK recently, I saw what could happen here again without intelligent policy.

“Medical indemnity in the UK is becoming unstable. The two major providers have pulled out of private obstetrics. There is talk of pulling out of coverage in other high risk areas.”

Dr Gannon noted that more than a decade ago, the AMA advocated tirelessly and brought together the profession to work with the Government in designing a series of schemes that have been a resounding policy success.

Those schemes have promoted stability. They provide affordable insurance, which flows through to affordable care.

That has been the AMA’s strong message heading into the current review of indemnity insurance. 

“Thankfully, the Government has been receptive to our advice, and I am grateful to Health Minister Greg Hunt for listening,” he said.

“He was surprised to hear that annual premiums got as high as $126,000 a few years ago. And that’s after the support schemes’ contributions are taken into account.

“We now have a review that is focussed on improving and building on the current policy success. It is not a savings exercise.

“It removes a threat to a stable medical workforce.”

CHRIS JOHNSON

AMA letting legislators know its views on pharmacy review

Below is an edited version of the AMA’s submission to the Pharmacy Remuneration and Regulation Review Interim Report.

Overall, the AMA considers the recommendations, if implemented, will benefit consumers by improving access to affordable medicines and enhancing the quality of medicines related care provided by pharmacists.

The AMA’s submission focuses on the recommendations and options described in the interim report which impact patient care.

The recommendations and options relating to patient access to medicines and their experiences within pharmacies appear sensible and well considered.

In particular, the AMA supports:

  • improvements to the PBS Safety Net which would enhance patients’ understanding and access, for example, the introduction of a central electronic system that automatically tracks individual patient PBS expenditure;
  • audits of pharmacy compliance with medicines dispensing requirements, such as correct medicines labelling and the provision of Consumer Medicines Information leaflets, in line with State/Territory legislation and Pharmacy Board of Australia and Pharmaceutical Society of Australia guidelines; and
  • improvements to electronic prescription systems and medication records to enhance continuity of care and reduce medication errors. However, the AMA notes that prescribing software would require updating to enable full electronic prescribing and that a small, but still significant, proportion of medical practitioners do not use these systems, especially in rural/remote locations with poor internet connections.

The AMA supports the Review recommendation that homeopathic products should not be sold in PBS-approved pharmacies. Selling these products in pharmacies encourages consumers to believe they are efficacious when they are not.

The AMA notes the interim report proposal that if pharmacists provide a service that is also offered by alternative primary healthcare professionals, the same Government payment should be applied to that service. While a service may superficially appear the same, it is important to recognise that the delivery, quality and comprehensiveness of that service may differ between health professionals and the context within which it is provided.

For example, a patient administered a flu vaccine in a pharmacy just receives a flu vaccine. A patient receiving a flu vaccine administered by a General Practitioner also receives a preceding consultation which includes a health assessment specific to that patient, based on a sound understanding of the patient’s past history and health needs.

This might include a check whether the patient’s other recommended vaccinations are up-to-date, whether a cervical screening test is due, a blood pressure check if appropriate, a check of the patient’s adherence and tolerance of any prescription medicines, and any other appropriate and (evidence-based) opportunistic preventative health care.

Even if the General Practice employs nurse practitioners to deliver the vaccine itself, a patient has first been assessed by a General Practitioner who continues to be close at hand if needed.

If the Commonwealth Government were to consider paying pharmacists to administer flu vaccines to high risk populations, the services provided by a pharmacist and a medical practitioner in this context would not be equivalent.

Clearly there would also need to be research on whether flu vaccinations in pharmacies are cost-effective in comparison to a flu vaccination in a General Practice clinic given the value-add provided in the latter service.

Any cost-benefit analysis would also need to take into account the indirect costs of delayed or missed diagnoses leading to higher cost care, that are more likely when care is fragmented by patients relying on health care provided by a pharmacist.

The AMA agrees with the recommendations in the interim report that government-funded services should be evidence-based and cost-effective. Pharmacy-based services that do not meet these criteria, such as the Amcal’s Pathology Health Screening Service targeting “relatively young and fit customers … for general health purposes … as opposed to risk assessment or diagnosis” should not be eligible for government funding.

The AMA’s earlier submission to this review expanded in some detail regarding the push by the Pharmacy Guild, motivated by revenue generation, to expand the scope of practice of pharmacists into the provision of medical services.

The AMA has already stated its views on the barriers imposed by current pharmacy location rules in its previous submission to the Review, and in numerous earlier submissions to Government. The AMA supports changes to pharmacy regulation which would allow more pharmacies and medical practices to be co-located. The current restrictions are inflexible and are difficult to justify in terms of public benefit.

AMA understands that the Australian Government has entered into an agreement with the Pharmacy Guild of Australia to continue indefinitely the current protections the rules provide to Guild members. However, the AMA is disappointed that the Government has made this decision despite the obvious benefits that would accrue by allowing access to high quality primary health care services in a way that is convenient to patients, enhances patient access and improves collaboration between healthcare professionals.

Facilitating collaboration between medical practitioners and pharmacists will only improve patient outcomes through less medication mismanagement and better medication compliance.

The AMA agrees there are benefits in future community pharmacy agreements being limited to remuneration for the dispensing of PBS medicines and associated regulation. This would allow pharmacy programs, such as medication adherence and management services currently funded under the Agreement, to be funded in ways that are more consistent with how other primary care health services are funded.

Given these programs are about providing health services, rather than medicines dispensing per se, it makes sense for them to be assessed, monitored, evaluated and audited in a similar way to medical services under the MBS.

Approximately $1.2 billion has been provided to pharmacies under the current community pharmacy agreement without this level of transparency and accountability. No evaluations of pharmacy programs under the Sixth Community Pharmacy Agreement have been made public.

Moving pharmacist health services outside of the Agreement would also open the way for more flexible models of funding, for example, support for pharmacists working within a General Practice team and other innovative, patient-focused models of care.

The AMA would also welcome inclusion in future consultations undertaken prior to the finalisation of the next community pharmacy agreement, as proposed in the Review interim report. The AMA recognises the valuable contribution pharmacists make in improving the quality use of medicines.

Pharmacists working with doctors and patients can help ensure medication adherence, improve medication management, and provide education about medication safety. The AMA fully supports ongoing and adequate funding of evidence-based pharmacist services such as home medicine reviews and the provision of dose administration aids.

It is important that Government-funded pharmacy programs are monitored and evaluated for effectiveness and cost effectiveness to ensure the expenditure provides tax payers with value for money. The findings from these evaluations will help improve and strengthen the programs.

The AMA fully supports the recommendations made to enhance access to medicines programs for Indigenous Australians and to support Aboriginal Health Service pharmacy ownership and operations.

The full submission can be found at:

system/tdf/documents/AMA%20Submission%20-%20Interim%20report%20-%20Pharmacy%20remuneration%20and%20regulation%20review%20Jul17.pdf?file=1&type=node&id=46835

 

Disease and nutrition being targeted in the Pacific

Combating disease and improving nutrition among Pacific islands populations is the focus of new initiatives funded by the Australian Government.

Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has announced a $7.7 million commitment towards innovative pilot programs targeting mosquito-borne diseases in Fiji, Vanuatu and Kiribati.

Another $2.5 million is being contributed towards nutrition programs in the Pacific.

Australia’s innovationXchange has partnered with Monash University’s Eliminate Dengue Program and national health ministries to target dengue, Zika virus, and Chikungunya.

The program uses naturally occurring Wolbachia bacteria to stop mosquitoes from transmitting these diseases to human populations.

“Dengue is an insidious virus that emerges quickly when the conditions are right and in its severe form, it can be fatal,” Ms Bishop said.

“In Fiji, Vanuatu and Kiribati, over 30,000 people have been infected in the last decade.

“These pilots build on Australia’s existing efforts to promote health security in the Pacific by building countries’ capacities to detect, assess and respond to diseases with epidemic potential.

“Given Australia’s close proximity to our Pacific neighbours, supporting regional health security also works to ensure our own national health security.”

Malnutrition is also a challenge in the Pacific, with about half of all children in Papua New Guinea stunted because of chronic under-nutrition.

Across the Pacific the prevalence of non-communicable diseases, including diabetes, is rising, and linked to poor diet choices.

The Government will invest $4 million in winners of the LAUNCH Food Challenge to improve nutrition in our region, including $2.5 million in the Pacific.

Winning initiatives will work to increase local production of healthy food using innovative technology and drive healthier food choices through improved public health communication.

LAUNCH Food is a global innovation challenge supported by Australia’s innovationXchange, USAID’s Global Development Lab and regional stakeholders.

The innovationXchange was established in March 2015 within the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade to form new partnerships and identify innovative approaches to improve the effectiveness and impact of the Australian aid program, and public policy more generally.

CHRIS JOHNSON

[Perspectives] Ilona Kickbusch: global health reformer

Nowadays global health has high visibility. But it wasn’t always so. It took champions to put global health on the agenda, among them Ilona Kickbusch. Currently Director of the global health programme at the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies in Geneva, she has had a distinguished career in WHO, government, and academia that has shaped global health. She’s also seen major social and political change in her life. Kickbusch grew up in post-war Germany and has vivid memories of living in both a divided Germany and a new democracy.

[Comment] Risk of Zika-related microcephaly: stable or variable?

As unexpected as the epidemic of microcephaly was, the Brazilian Government immediately set up a special notification system. By December, 2015, 3174 suspected cases of microcephaly were reported (more than 1000 in one state in northeast Brazil1). Zika spread rapidly in Latin America. We braced ourselves for a vast international epidemic of Zika-related microcephaly; but when it did not happen we asked ourselves why. Were the numbers an artifact of over reporting?2 Were they real, did cofactors modify the risk given Zika virus in pregnancy,3 or was it due to something else?

[Editorial] The UK’s inadequate plan for reducing childhood obesity

“Next stage of world-leading childhood obesity plan announced”, trumpeted the press release from Public Health England (PHE) on Aug 18, to coincide with the 1-year anniversary since the UK Government’s child obesity plan was launched. The new focus is calorie reduction, with PHE warning that the UK population is exceeding caloric intake by around 200–300 calories a day. With a third of children being overweight or obese by the time they leave primary school, and the latest data highlighting an increasing prevalence of type 2 diabetes in young people (621 received care from paediatric diabetic clinics in 2015–16), confronting childhood obesity remains an urgent public health challenge.

AMA calls for urgent Government action on junk policies

The community is losing faith in private health insurance, with health funds offering too many “junk” policies that provide no cover when people need it, AMA President Dr Michael Gannon says.

The AMA has called on the Government to legislate to ensure that all policies have a minimum level of cover, appropriate to the age of the person taking out the policy.

“Private medicine is under siege and, in many ways, that’s because, very quickly, the community is losing faith with their private health insurance, which underpins most visits to private hospitals,” Dr Gannon told ABC AM.

“We seem to be seeing an orchestrated campaign by the insurers – an industry which is increasingly a for-profit industry – to deflect the blame from the real problems, and the real problems are that patients are getting sick and tired of finding out when they’re sick that their insurance isn’t good enough.”

Almost 35,000 people dropped their hospital cover between March and June this year, latest figures show. More than half (17,685) were in the 20 to 24 age group.

The slide coincided with an average 4.84 per cent premium rise in April – three times the inflation rate – and a 15.5 per cent rise in health funds’ net profits in the 2016-17 financial year.

While the AMA is part of the Private Health Ministerial Advisory Council (PHMAC), which is due to report by the end of the year, Dr Gannon says enough is known about junk policies for the Government to act now.

“There are people who have carefully, dutifully, responsibly put aside money for private health insurance, over many years in many cases, and then when they get sick they find they’re not covered,” he said.

“Policies for people over the age of 60 that exclude them from having their hips or knees fixed, or having their eyes fixed, are silly.

“We’ve a proliferation of junk policies which are worth nothing more than the paper they’re written on, and are purely designed so people avoid the tax penalty.

“The Government has the power to legislate — to make sure that [the policies] are worthwhile for people who take them out.”

Dr Gannon rejected a call by former Health Department head, Professor Stephen Duckett, for doctors to be forced to publish their fees.

He conceded that doctors could do better when it comes to providing information, but said patients should make better use of their general practitioner.

“If you’ve got time to spend with your GP, if you’ve got your own trusted GP, they’re pretty clever,” Dr Gannon told ABC Radio Adelaide.

“They get to know you, they get to know which specialists might fit with your personality, which specialists bulk bill, which specialists work in which hospitals, which operations can be done where.

“They know this information, and if you really want to talk about value in the health system, it’s having a good relationship with your GP.

“A lot of the time, a good GP will save you a visit to the specialist to start with, and a lot of the time they’ll work out who the right specialist for you is.”

The AMA’s submission to the Senate Value and Affordability of Private Health Insurance and Out-of-Pocket Medical Costs in Australian Health Care inquiry points out that medical fees make up just 16 per cent of total benefit outlays for private health insurers, so it would take a substantial decrease in fees to have an effect on premiums.

But it argued that if doctors’ fees should be published in the interests of transparency, so should all components of private health insurance costs.

“Private health insurers, hospitals, and other key stakeholders should all provide details of costs to the system,” the submission said.

“This could include senior management remuneration and/or fully itemised hospital list of charges post-surgery, so the patient can see exactly how their insurance has supported them.”

The AMA is prepared to consider a proposal where specialists publicly reported on a Government website the fees they charge for the five most common procedures they carry out.

MARIA HAWTHORNE

[Perspectives] Fat and heart disease: challenging the dogma

Many readers will be incensed by this book. If you think saturated fats and cholesterol are bad for you, you’ll be incensed. If you think the fat story is exaggerated, you’ll be incensed. If you trust in the objectivity of science to inform health policy, you’ll be incensed. Stories of shocking scientific corruption and culpability by government agencies are all to be found in Nina Teicholz’s bestseller The Big Fat Surprise. This is a disquieting book about scientific incompetence, evangelical ambition, and ruthless silencing of dissent that has shaped our lives for decades.

Political message in National Press Club speech

AMA President Dr Michael Gannon has called on all sides of politics to take some of the politicking out of health, for the good of the nation.

Addressing the National Press Club of Australia, Dr Gannon said some health issues needed bipartisan support and all politicians should acknowledge that.

“Some of the structural pillars of our health system – public hospitals, private health, the balance between the two systems, primary care, the need to invest in health prevention – Let’s make these bipartisan,” he said.

“Let’s take the point scoring out of them. Both sides should publicly commit to supporting and funding these foundations. The public – our patients – expect no less.”

During the nationally televised address, broadcast live as he delivered it on August 23, Dr Gannon warned political leaders that the next election was anyone’s to win and so they should pay close attention to health policy.

“Last year we had a very close election, and health policy was a major factor in the closeness of the result,” he said.

“The Coalition very nearly ended up in Opposition because of its poor health policies. Labor ran a very effective Mediscare campaign.

“As I have noted, the Government appears to have learnt its lesson on health, and is now more engaged and consultative – with the AMA and other health groups.

“The next election is due in two years. There could possibly be one earlier. A lot earlier.

“As we head to the next election, I ask that we try to take some of the ideology and hard-nosed politicking out of health.”

In a wide-ranging speech, the AMA President outlined the organisation’s priorities, while also explaining the ground it has covered in helping to deliver good outcomes for both patients and doctors.

The AMA’s priorities extend to Indigenous health, medical training and workforce, the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, and the many public health issues facing the Australian community – most notably tobacco, immunisation, obesity, and alcohol abuse.

“I have called for the establishment of a no-fault compensation scheme for the very small number of individuals injured by vaccines,” Dr Gannon said.

“I have called on the other States and Territories to mirror the Western Australian law, which exempts treating doctors from mandatory reporting and stops them getting help.

“We also need to deal with ongoing problems in aged care, palliative care, mental health, euthanasia, and the scope of practice of other health professions.

“In the past 12 months, the AMA has released statements on infant nutrition, female genital mutilation, and addiction.

“In coming months, we will have more to say on cost of living, homelessness, elder abuse, and road safety, to name but a few.

“Then there are the prominent highly political and social issues that have a health dimension, and require an AMA position and AMA comment.

“All these things have health impacts. As the peak health and medical advocacy group in the country, the community expects us to have a view and to make public comment. And we do.

“Not everybody agrees with us. But our positions are based on evidence, in medical science, and our unique knowledge and experience of medicine and human health.

“Health policy is ever-evolving. Health reform never sleeps.”

The address covered, among other things, health economics: “Health should never be considered just an expensive line item in a budget – it is an investment in the welfare, wellbeing, and productivity of the Australian people.”

Public hospital funding: “The idea that a financial disincentive, applied against the hospital, will somehow ‘encourage’ doctors to take better care of patients than they already do is ludicrous.”

Private health: “If we do not get reforms to private health insurance right – and soon – we may see essential parts of health care disappear from the private sector.

The medical workforce: “We do not need more medical school places. The focus needs to be further downstream.

“Unfortunately, we are seeing universities continuing to ignore community need and lobbying for new medical schools or extra places.

“This is a totally arrogant and irresponsible approach, fuelled by a desire for the prestige of a medical school and their bottom line.

“Macquarie University is just the latest case in point.”

And general practice: “General practice is under pressure, yet it continues to deliver great outcomes for patients.

“GPs are delivering high quality care, and remain the most cost effective part of our health system. But they still work long and hard, often under enormous pressure.

“The decision to progressively lift the Medicare freeze on GP services is a step in the right direction.”

On even more controversial topics, Dr Gannon stressed that the AMA is completely independent of governments.

While sometimes it gets accused of being too conservative, he said, it was not surprising to see the reaction to the AMA’s position on some issues – like marriage equality.

“Our Position Statement outlines the health implications of excluding LGBTIQ individuals from the institution of marriage,” he said.

“Things like bullying, harassment, victimisation, depression, fear, exclusion, and discrimination, all impact on physical and mental health.

“I received correspondence from AMA members and the general public. The overwhelming majority applauded the AMA position.

“Those who opposed the AMA stance said that we were being too progressive, and wading into areas of social policy.

“The AMA will from time to time weigh in on social issues. We should call out discrimination and inequity in all forms, especially when their consequences affect people’s health and wellbeing.”

Last year, the AMA released an updated Position Statement on Euthanasia and Physician Assisted Suicide.

It came at a time when a number of States, most notably South Australia and Victoria, were considering voluntary euthanasia legislation.

There was an expectation in some quarters that the AMA would come out with a radical new direction. But it didn’t.

“The AMA maintains its position that doctors should not be involved in interventions that have as their primary intention the ending of a person’s life,” Dr Gannon said.

“This does not include the discontinuation of treatments that are of no medical benefit to a dying patient. This is not euthanasia.

“Doctors have an ethical duty to care for dying patients so that they can die in comfort and with dignity.”

The AMA also takes Indigenous health very seriously.

Dr Gannon travelled to Darwin last year to launch the AMA’s annual Indigenous Health Report Card, which focused on Rheumatic Heart Disease.

“In simple terms, RHD is a bacterial infection from the throat or the skin that damages heart valves and ultimately causes heart failure,” he said.

“It is a disease that has virtually been expunged from the non-Indigenous community. It is a disease of poverty.

“RHD is perhaps the classic example of a Social Determinant of Health. It proves why investment in clean water, adequate housing, and sanitation is just as important as echocardiography and open heart surgery.

“The significance of challenging social issues like Indigenous health, marriage equality, and euthanasia is that they highlight the unique position and strengths of the AMA.

“The AMA was recently ranked the most ethical organisation in the country in the Ethics Index produced by the Governance Institute of Australia.

“People want and expect us to have a view – an opinion. Sometimes a second opinion.” 

Chris Johnson 

 

A transcript of the full address can be found here:
media/dr-gannon-national-press-club-address-0

 

 

Organ donation – should Australia adopt an opt-out system?

Opinion

BY DAVID TARRANT

The statistics paint a stark picture. More than 12,000 Australians suffer each year while they are on transplant waiting lists or dialysis. Six Australians will die in August alone while waiting for an organ transplant, a grim reminder of the limitations of the healthcare system in the face of overwhelming demand and scarce supply.

But is the organ donation system merely indicative of a failure by the Government to enact smart legislation that goes some way to overcoming societal apathy towards registering as an organ donor?  

It has become evident that Australia’s current opt-In organ procurement legislation has failed to correct the disparity between the number of people on organ transplant waiting lists and the number of organs available for transplantation.  A number of factors have been identified which potentiate this ever-widening gap.  Primarily, the aforementioned societal unwillingness to registering as an organ donor, followed by potential donors’ families denying consent when donation is requested, and the reluctance of health care professionals to request that the deceased patient’s organs be donated.

Australia is ranked 20 in the world for organ donation. We are behind countries such as Croatia, Spain, Portugal and Italy.  Recent international studies have demonstrated that implementation of an Opt Out system of organ procurement would increase donation rates by 50 per cent.

Spain has been most successful in implementing “soft” opt-out legislation there, sustaining the highest rate of organ donation in the world for the past two decades. Implementation of the Spanish model opt-out legislation in Australia could result in an additional 1,400 Australians receiving a transplant every year. Think about the impact of that on the healthcare system in terms of primary, hospital and allied health care, and the associated effect on patient flow.

Notwithstanding the advantages of an opt-out system for those individuals on organ transplant lists, nevertheless implementation of an opt-out system in Australia requires examination of several ethical issues. Whilst Australian law states that there is no property in a dead body, the potential for a negative impact upon individual autonomy must be considered. 

Despite proponents of presumed consent suggesting that implementation of an opt-out system could improve individual autonomy, a number of authors are sceptical of this claim.  However, when weighing limits of personal autonomy against the concept of benefits to society in terms of giving back to the community, under a communitarian-based approach, the number of lives that could be saved as a result of the enacting opt-out legislation could be preferable to society.

If implementation of a national “soft” opt-out organ donation legislation is proposed in Australia, enactment of this type of legislation must be prefaced by comprehensive publicity and education programs, focusing on both the general public and health care professionals. In conjunction with these amendments to legislation, Australia should adopt an individual hospital-based approach to organ donation as described under the “Spanish model”.

Australia must act now to implement these changes. People will continue to die until the disparity between organs required and those available for organ transplantation is rectified.

 Views expressed in the above Opinion piece are those of the author and do not reflect official policy of the AMA.

David Tarrant is a lawyer and a registered nurse. He completed his Honours thesis on organ donation, which was published in the NSW Operating Theatre Nurses Association Journal, and has also drafted papers on related issues (in collaboration with his colleagues at Carroll & O’Dea Lawyers). Prior to embarking on his legal career, David worked in hospitals in Tamworth, Sydney and London. Following completion of his Graduate Diploma in Clinical Practice, he was awarded the Anne Carrodus Memorial Prize for excellence in clinical practice.