Abstract
Consumers regard access to hospital services as one of the key components of quality in health care delivery. A mixed public/private system operates in Victoria, but a morbidity collection from private hospitals was commenced only relatively recently. In 1993-94 the collection covered 82 per cent of private hospital separations, and it was considered timely to examine the utilisation patterns in the private system and compare them with those in the public system. Medical and surgical emergencies and other complex conditions and procedures are serviced largely in the public sector, whereas private hospitals are utilised for elective and less complex surgery and non-urgent conditions. Occupancy rates are around 79 per cent in public hospitals and 67 per cent in private hospitals. Elective surgery waiting list data suggest that while urgent cases are treated within a month, significant proportions wait six months or more for non-urgent surgery. Private health insurance is the main factor in determining access to and the utilisation private hospitals. The current Medicare Agreement and the move to separate the role of purchaser and provider may allow the maximal utilisation of private hospitals and diminish the burden of chronic illness.
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CITATION STYLE
O’Hara, D., & Brook, C. (1996). The utilisation of public and private hospitals in Victoria: an issue of access? Australian Health Review : A Publication of the Australian Hospital Association, 19(3), 40–55. https://doi.org/10.1071/AH960040b
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