Goulburn Murray schools share in budget spend

Goulburn Murray region schools were the biggest winners in yesterday’s Victorian budget.

The Victorian Government announced $230 million for school buildings and equipment in the budget.

It includes $1.5 million to rebuild the Toolamba Primary School which was badly damaged by fire in February.

There is funding to keep the Tawonga Primary School open and improvements to those at Euroa, Mansfield, Mount Beauty, Myrtleford and Tallygaroopna.

Visitor facilities at the Mount Buffalo chalet will also be improved and an Indigenous dance academy will be established in Mooroopna.

A total of $2 million will be spent planning the future needs of courts including those at Shepparton and Wangaratta.

The Government will also commit $136 million for fire and emergency services.

But Dr Harry Hemley from the Australian Medical Association says there is no mention of funding in the state budget for the Albury-Wodonga Health Service.

He says the Victorian Government is required to contribute its share of money to running the health service.

Dr Hemley says the Government also needs to better plan for growing demand on health services into the future.

“We’re growing at 100,000 people a year, we need to have a plan and how we’re going to address that growth,” he said.

“In the plan you would have things like the Albury-Wodonga cross border arrangement and all of the small hospitals and how they’re going to fit into it.

“That’s what I mean when I say we need a vision for the future – we need a plan for the future.”

Meanwhile, regional police stations have been granted $10 million for improvements, including money to buy land for a new police station in Echuca.

Campaspe Mayor Peter Williams says it has been a long time coming.

“It is very much a run-down facility and it’s undersized and it certainly doesn’t deliver what the police need to deliver – best quality service,” he said.

“It’s exciting that they’ve identified they’re going to purchase land to build the new station and we hope that that will now roll on to a new police station in the next few years.”

The Liberal Member for Benambra, Bill Tilley, says he is disappointed no money has been allocated to expand the Wodonga police station, which is overcrowded.

“We’ve heard the former chief commissioner of police talking about how she’s been working with this Government about the extensions for the Wodonga police station,” he said.

“[But] no certainty and no time line has been given or any money has been committed to Wodonga police station.”

Budget ‘short-sighted’ on health

The peak body for medical practitioners has criticised the State Government’s health-focused budget, saying it does not deliver enough for patients.

The Australian Medical Association’s Victorian President, Dr Harry Hemley, says billions of dollars in extra funding for hospitals is a “good start”.

But he says the budget is short-sighted in its plans for the future.

“If we are going to keep our population growing, and look after our aged people, we need more beds,” he said.

“We need a vision for the future, and I’m afraid this budget does not deliver that.”

The State Opposition has echoed the concerns, saying the Government’s promise to build and upgrade hospitals is misleading.

The Opposition Leader, Ted Baillieu, says some of the projects have been funded outside the traditional four-year funding cycle.

“Anybody who wakes up in Bendigo and thinks this is fantastic, the Government have delivered a new hospital, they have got another thing coming to them,” he said.

“There is only $200 million of that hospital funded over the next four years. There is $277 million short in the next four years.”

The Victorian Aboriginal Controlled Health Organisation has also expressed dismay at the Government’s lack of extra funding for indigenous health.

The organisation’s chief executive officer, Jill Gallagher, says the Government should have used the budget to close the gap between indigenous and non-indigenous life expectancies.

“The health infrastructure dollars, the $4 billion, that is fantastic,” she said.

“We would been happy if one per cent of that had come to indigenous health infrastructure. We are really, really sad and disappointed.”

But not all reactions to Victoria’s 154th budget have been negative.

Tim Piper from the Australian Industry Group has welcomed the Government’s reductions to payroll tax and WorkCover premiums.

“We have got to be happy that the Brumby Government have been able to come through with some decent deductions,” he said.

Brian Walsh from the Master Builders Association is also pleased to see increases to the first homebuyers grant.

“The budget is one which will make builders happy, because there is work for the commercial sector as well as the residential,” he said.

The public transport users association has welcomed spending on new trams and rail infrastructure, but says the package ignores problems with bus services in Melbourne’s outer suburbs.

Doctor intern questions remain

The Australian Medical Association says it still has questions about how well a Wagga Base Hospital intern was supported, before he committed suicide.

Doctor William Huynh died in January last year.

Friends blamed excessive working hours, something rejected by health officials.

An internal New South Wales Health report confirms he raised concerns about his workload, which required him to supervise two surgical teams.

But the report found Dr Huynh’s death was not predictable.

The Chairman of the AMAs Doctors-in-Training program, Doctor Andrew Perry says it is a concerning case.

“Covering two surgical teams in and of itself is not of major concern,” he said.

“The main issue is whether he was actually being properly supervised and supported at the time…he has brought up concerns about his work load.

“He himself did actually have some concerns about whether he was able to perform and cover that duty.”

There have been increased calls for an overhaul of JMO working hours, after the death of Dr Huynh last year.

Dr Perry says the AMA plans to repeat an audit of junior doctor working hours to ensure fatigue and stress is not putting them at risk.

“The issue of doctors’ welfare is always one of the top priorities of the AMA and that covers a range of areas so it covers safe hours and it also covers doctors’ mental well being,” he said.

“And I think we may have seen those two issues intersecting with this tragic suicide.

“And next year we’ll be repeating an audit of safe hours which we last did five years ago.”

Bligh demands more detail about health plan

Queensland Premier Anna Bligh says she wants more detail this week about Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s health and hospitals plan.

The Federal Government has offered the states $500 million for emergency department waiting times if they sign the agreement.

Ms Bligh says that is a good down payment but she would like more information about the overall plan before state and territory leaders meet next week.

“We’ll be burning some midnight oil between now and COAG [Council of Australian Governments],” she said.

“We don’t believe that being given complex details on the day is a reasonable way to secure agreement to such comprehensive reform.

“I look forward to more details over the next seven or eight days but I’ll be going to Canberra next week looking for a deal for Queensland.

“But I want it to be a good deal and the right deal for a state like ours.”

She says she welcomes any new funds into the health system.

“I’m very pleased the Prime Minister has identified emergency departments as a priority,” she said.

“We are going to COAG and what I’ll be looking for is further commitment from the Prime Minister in other key areas, particularly aged care and primary health.

“If we’re going to sign up a deal for Queenslanders, I want it to be the right deal and this is a good down payment.”

AMAQ concern

The Australian Medical Association of Queensland (AMAQ) says a shortage of hospital beds is the biggest challenge to cutting emergency department waiting times.

AMAQ president Dr Mason Stevenson has welcomed the extra funding but says it will not be enough to provide the extra beds that are needed.

“AMA Queensland have worked out very recently that we need at least 450 additional beds right now in order to get our hospital occupancy rates down to 85 per cent,” he said.

“Only then will we truly be able to solve our emergency department woes.”

He says part of the funding depends on whether hospitals meet waiting time targets.

Dr Stevenson says the incentive system has worked well in the United Kingdom.

“This has been a system in place now for many years and they have successfully reached those targets so that 99 per cent, or 98 per cent of patients visiting an emergency department in the UK now enjoy waits of no more than four hours,” he said.

Rural services

Meanwhile, western Queensland MP Bruce Scott says the Federal Government’s health plan needs to ensure funding gets to small, rural health services.

Mr Scott, the Liberal National Party Member for Maranoa, is in the state’s central-west this week talking with residents about health services.

He says attracting doctors to rural communities is still a problem and using local hospital boards to determine funding priorities would help.

“I think if you leave those decisions and have got funding at a local level, I’m sure you’d have a much better chance of attracting doctors,” he said.

“Now that hasn’t happened in this term of the Federal Government.

“If we had the money going direct to local communities, they’d spend every dollar on health, whereas so much is hived off on the way through.”

Vic worse off under health takeover: AMA

The Australian Medical Association’s (AMA) Victorian branch has backed Premier John Brumby’s opposition to the Federal Government’s planned health takeover.

In a letter to the Premier, the AMA says the plan penalises Victoria for having the best- performing health system in the country.

AMA Victoria president Dr Harry Hemley says Victoria will be worse off under the plan.

“If we are to sign up as it is now, we would not get one extra dollar for the next four years into our hospital system,” he said.

“We would not receive one more episode of patient care or one more hospital bed for the next four years.”

Dr Hemley says the Premier is taking the right stand from the point of view of patient care.

“Things are going to get worse unless we can more beds and more services in our public hospitals,” he said.

Call for more smoke free venues

The Australian Medical Association wants all major public venues across WA to follow the lead of the Perth Zoo and ban smoking.

The Zoo agreed to the smoking ban after attracting a $160,000 sponsorship deal with the state government agency Healthway.

The ban comes into force today, just in time for school holidays.

The AMA’s WA President Gary Geelhoed says all open-air events should be smokefree.

“Public events that are outside events should look at banning smoking, specifically I would like Gloucester park, you know the trots and Ascot park, Belmont park in the racing world.”

AMAQ website rates Qld hospitals

The Australian Medical Association Queensland (AMAQ) has launched a website showing waiting times and bed occupancy details about Queensland hospitals.

The “Your Hospital’s Health” website is the latest salvo in the AMAQ’s “war on waste” campaign.

It uses statistics released quarterly by the State Government and also shows unpublished information on bed occupancy rates.

AMAQ president Dr Mason Stevenson says hospitals in Cairns, Mackay, Caloundra, Caboolture and Redcliffe have occupancy rates above 100 per cent.

“How can a hospital operate when we have greater than 100 per cent occupancy?” he asked.

The AMAQ says an extra 450 beds are needed immediately in public hospitals.

It also wants the State Government to commit to an extra $1.5 billion of health funding in the budget.

The Queensland Government says the AMAQ website contains information that is already available.

Health Minister Paul Lucas says the Government already has plans to deliver another 1,700 beds.

“If the AMA want to have a website, that’s fine, if that’s a way to recruit members that’s fine, but the Queensland Government provides more information than other states and will continue to provide more,” he said.

Debate does little to cure health concerns

Australia’s peak health bodies have not declared a winner from Tuesday’s leaders debate, labelling the clash a predictable sparring session that was more about politics than policy.

Whether Prime Minister Kevin Rudd or Opposition Leader Tony Abbott won the debate at the National Press Club depends on who you ask.

The commercial television “worm” made a return and was generally up for Mr Rudd and not so much for Mr Abbott.

Treasurer Wayne Swan said Mr Rudd had a plan while Mr Abbott had a “grudge”.

The Opposition’s health spokesman, Peter Dutton, said he thought the public would “like what they see” from Mr Abbott.

“I don’t think anybody will ever stand in any doubt what Tony Abbott is thinking. He speaks his mind. He’s direct,” Mr Dutton said.

But the Australian Medical Association (AMA) says the debate was all about politics with a little bit of policy mixed in.

AMA president Dr Andrew Pesce says Mr Abbott’s commitment to fund 3,500 extra beds in the public hospital system is welcome.

“That’s something which we’ve been calling for for years, so that’s a good thing,” Dr Pesce said.

And he says he is glad Mr Rudd has changed his mind over country hospital funding.

Small hospitals could now be eligible to continue receiving block funding rather than being forced into the case-mix system, under which funding is dished out on a per-patient basis.

“I think it’s one-all in new policy,” Dr Pesce said. “They’re both important announcements, so we’re pleased to hear that from both people.

“I’m not saying one was the winner.”

The change for country hospitals has also been welcomed by the Rural Doctors Association of Australia (RDAA).

“We’ve been working very hard lobbying for that to happen since the announcement the Prime Minister made a couple of weeks ago,” said RDAA chief executive Steve Sant.

“The end result [of the case-mix system] would have been a number of rural hospitals would have closed. They would have been unviable.

“But there wasn’t a great deal of substance in [the debate] to be quite truthful. So to some extent it was a boring debate.”

Lack of detail

Martin Laverty from Catholic Health Australia said he was disappointed with the lack of policy detail from both sides.

“For those who wanted some entertainment over lunch, they got a bit of that,” he said.

“But for people waiting on public hospital queues for surgery, they’re not going to get it any sooner.

“The Prime Minister could have outlined the detail as to how hospital networks were going to work. He could have outlined how he was going to extend choice, access and sustainability to Australia’s aged care system.

“Similarly, the Opposition Leader could have detailed how his plan for hospitals would improve access to public services around the nation.”

Cydde Miller from the Australian Healthcare and Hospital Association said the debate would have been more worthwhile if Mr Abbott had released more policy.

“I think it really was quite predictable in that it was just a bit of a sparring session,” she said. “And that’s quite disappointing, I think, for voters.”

Ferocity and composure

Dr Mukesh Haikerwal, a former head of the AMA, said there was one fighter and one more placid player in the debate.

“I think it’s up to people how they like to see their politics played, with ferocity or with composure,” he said.

The commercial television “worm” made its return and found Mr Rudd to be the clear winner.

But the Liberal Party’s federal director, Brian Loughnane, read it differently.

“I think it was very good for Tony Abbott. Tony Abbott clearly established himself as an alternate prime minister,” Mr Loughnane said.

Former Liberal staffer and political commentator Grahame Morris points out there is a long way to go until polling day.

“They both did their jobs. The Prime Minister gets the bed pan award and Tony Abbott gets the thermometer award,” Mr Morris said.

“These sorts of things tweak polls a little bit, but come election day, today won’t matter one jot.”

AMA backs call for safe haven legislation

The President of the Australian Medical Association says the government should consider baby safe haven laws as part of a support plan to assist struggling new mothers.

Tasmanian Labor Senator Helen Polley has called on the government to introduce the laws which would allow mothers to safely abandon their babies without fear of prosecution.

AMA President, Dr Andrew Pesce, says the safe haven laws should be considered as part of a comprehensive plan to identify and support mothers struggling with parenthood.

“It’s obviously very important that we as a community do everything we can to assist mothers and obviously their babies who are in such a degree of distress that they’re thinking of abandoning their baby,” Dr Pesce said.

“So this is something which can go some way to this,” he said.

Liberal RAH rebuild costed too low: AMA

The Australian Medical Association (AMA) says the Liberal Party’s estimated cost of $700 million to rebuild the Royal Adelaide Hospital is too low.

The AMA says the Opposition must revert to an alternative $1.4 billion option to refit the hospital if it wins Saturday’s South Australian election.

AMA president Andrew Lavender says, as well as bed replacement, core sections of the hospital need rebuilding, including the emergency and intensive care units.

He says that cannot be done for $700 million.

“We do need a world-class trauma centre and while we don’t expect that facilities need to be available in the next six years or so, there certainly has to be a planned, staged redevelopment of the Royal Adelaide Hospital,” he said.

“I think it’s a bit disingenuous to just talk about building the beds when we know we need the rest of the hospital also needs to be rebuilt.”

A spokesman for the Liberal Party says it is not surprising the peak medical body would be pushing for more money.

QEH money

Labor has pledged $125 million toward more refurbishing work at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, if it is returned to office.

There would be a new three-storey building to accommodate an emergency department, an outpatients area and nine operating theatres.

Rudd flags two-tier hospital system

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says the Government will offer incentive payments to outstanding hospitals under its new health plan.

If the states and territories agree to the plan, the Government will draw up a set of national benchmarks for the delivery of hospital services.

At last night’s Australian Medical Association dinner, Mr Rudd said hospitals that exceeded the standards would be given more funding.

“We will put money on the line to drive those standards,” he said.

“[The Government will provide] more funds to deliver essential health services and drive innovation and improvements across our hospitals.

“We must improve waiting times for emergency services. We must improve waiting times for elective surgery. But consistent with the move to activity-based funding, we won’t be handing over blank cheques.

“We believe it is crucial to recognise concrete improvements in a concrete way. This will give local hospitals more funds to deliver essential health services and drive innovation and improvements across our hospitals.”

But the president of the Australian Medical Association, Dr Andrew Pesce, says a major restructure of the health system will be hard for the sector.

“It’s obviously painful for the Government, it’s painful for the Opposition, it’s painful for politicians, it’s painful for the state ministers it’s painful for the department of health bureaucrats,” he said.

“And it’s going to be painful for the medical profession, because if we are going to deliver change which delivers good outcomes, there are no free kicks – we are all going to have to contribute.”

‘Amateur hour experimentation’

The Federal Opposition Leader Tony Abbott says elements of the Government’s health plan have merit, but he wants more detail.

Mr Abbott told the AMA gathering that he does like the idea of paying hospitals directly for the services they deliver.

“Paying a hospital to do something makes more sense than rewarding a hospital for doing nothing,” he said.

But he was very critical of the Prime Minister’s “overly bureaucratic” plan and expressed doubts that Commonwealth public servants will be able to implement it.

“The hospital system is too important to be subject to amateur hour experimentation,” he said.

“I think that every Australian should be very concerned that Mr Rudd and his ministers can’t rule out tax increases to pay for their experimentation with public hospitals.

“It has the potential to close down hundreds of country hospitals, it will add a substantial additional bureaucrats and he can’t in the longer term rule out new taxes to pay for it.

“So all up it’s a disastrous plan.”

Health progress report delay

The Tasmanian Government’s quarterly health performance report looks like being delayed until after the election.

The government has put health at the centre of its re-election campaign.

It was selling its health credentials again yesterday with a visit to the Royal Hobart Hospital to spruik nearly $600 million promised to upgrade the site.

The quarterly progress chart for the Department of Health and Human Services includes data on surgery waiting lists and should have been released by the end of last month.

The Department’s spokesman, Des Graham, says a new computer system is behind the delays and the progress chart will be published as soon as all the information has been verified.

Bed plea

Doctors and nurses are urging the government to reconsider its priorities for the state’s health system.

Neroli Ellis from the Nursing Federation welcomes the government’s commitment to the Royal but says the system really needs more staff and hospital beds.

“The Tasmanian Health plan clearly states we need another 350 beds within six years,” she said.

Chris Middleton from the Australian Medical Association says current bed shortages pose serious risks.

“Sick patients sit around in emergency departments and get sicker because the staff are trying hard to look after both them and the new emergency cases coming through the door.

The Health Minister Lara Giddings says the health policy could provide up to 300 extra beds.