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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Australian report criticises 'casemix' system
Patients suffer under new hospital funding scheme
By Margaret Rees
23 June 1998
Patient care is being sacrificed for financial reasons under
a new hospital funding scheme -- known as "casemix"
-- a recent government report has acknowledged in Australia.
The auditor-general in the state of Victoria found that 80
percent of senior clinicians say that casemix has directly compromised
treatment in the public hospital system since it was introduced
in 1993.
Based on interviews with 700 senior health practitioners responsible
for managing acute health services in hospital wards -- including
doctors and nurses -- it finds strong evidence that hospitals
are admitting patients according to financial considerations,
rather than clinical need.
The Victorian Liberal Party government of Premier Jeff Kennett
has spearheaded the Australian introduction of casemix classification
and payment systems, originally developed in the United States
under President Ronald Reagan to slash federal health funding.
Casemix formulae use financial incentives to push hospitals
to reduce patients' length of stay (LOS), in order to accelerate
the rate at which patients are discharged from hospital. Victoria
now spends the lowest amount per patient in Australia.
How the system works in practice can be seen at the inner-Melbourne
Alfred Hospital, one of the state's largest. A new clinical director
of psychiatry was appointed on the basis of the applicant's willingness
to reduce the average LOS from 20 days to less than the state
average of 16 days within a year. The hospital's long-term aim
is to cut the figure to eight days.
The smaller outer suburban Angliss Health Service recently
considered monetary incentives for doctors to discharge patients
more quickly, until an outcry from the doctors prevented the scheme.
The interviews with health workers uncovered what the report
described as compelling evidence "of the breadth and depth
of negative perceptions" of the new system.
- Half the senior doctors held the view that reduced LOS had
a negative effect on health outcomes. The average LOS for metropolitan
hospital patients has declined by 1.55 days or 27 percent.
- Fifty-seven per cent of senior doctors and nearly half the
charge nurses and senior health professionals believed that risks
associated with early patient discharge had not been adequately
safeguarded by improved home nursing care.
- Two-thirds of the senior clinicians complained about increased
administrative workloads, declining cleanliness, reduced cleaning
staff, less maintenance of equipment and buildings, decreased
patient access to allied services and greater work demands on
doctors and nurses.
The audit report admits that nowhere in the world have indicators
or guidelines been established to determine the quality of patient
care post-casemix. That is, a far-reaching experiment in social
engineering was embarked upon with disregard for the implications,
and no forward planning to assess its consequences.
Vulnerable patient groups such as the chronically ill and the
poor, likely to suffer more than one condition, may be at risk
due to premature discharge, the report states.
Around one-third of hospitals said they had changed admission
practices since 1993. Examples included higher ratios of privately-insured
patients and concentration on better-paid treatments.
Summing up, the Victorian auditor-general Charles Baragwanath
notes dryly that the findings highlight a potential risk to the
provision of health services.
This damning picture emerges despite Baragwanath's attempt
to give a positive appraisal of casemix. He says it is "fairer,
especially in context of an overall budget reduction," than
the previous system. That is, he does not challenge the budget
cuts. In fact, he praises casemix as a mechanism to carry them
out.
Under casemix, classifications known as Diagnostic Related
Groupings (DRGs) enable governments to pinpoint the most expensive
patient categories. Hospitals are effectively compelled to bid
against each other for financing by delivering low-cost results
as measured by these DRGs.
Casemix has provided a sophisticated means to speed the process
of rationalisation and closure of hospitals. Governments are freed
from taking responsibility for their budget slashing, hiding behind
seemingly objective formulae.
See Also:
Further moves to privatise education in
Australia
[17 June 1998]
Australia - Workers and farmers
outraged by toxic dump plans in Werribee
[3 June 1998]
Waiting-list for hospital treatment in
Britain reaches record level
[2 June 1998]
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