Appendix 3
National Health Reform Agreement
Background
The Commonwealth and state and territory governments jointly
fund public hospital services. Since the introduction of Medicare in 1984, the
transfer of funds from the Commonwealth to the states and territories has been made
pursuant to agreements entered into by the respective governments.[1]
The Medicare Agreements were followed by the Australian Health Care Agreements
(AHCAs). The AHCAs were five year bilateral agreements. The indexation under
the AHCAs was calculated according to (weighted) population figures which took
into account demographic characteristics such as ageing and the Commonwealth
Wage Cost Index 1.[2]
Following the election of the Rudd Labor Government, the final AHCA was
extended into the 2008–09 financial year.
In December 2007, COAG agreed to commence a program of
substantive reform in order to increase productivity, address emerging
inflationary pressures and improve the quality of services delivered to the
Australian community in seven areas including health and ageing.[3]
As part of this process, the National Health and Hospitals Reform Commission
(NHHRC) was established in February 2008. The NHHRC provided advice on a
framework for the next AHCAs and development of a long-term health reform plan
to provide sustainable improvements in the performance of the health.[4]
At the March 2008 COAG meeting, it was agreed that in
developing the new health care agreement there would be a review of the
indexation formulas for the years ahead. COAG also agreed that the new
Australian Health Agreement should move to a proper long-term share of
Commonwealth funding for the public hospital system. COAG also agreed that the
new health care agreement would be signed in December 2008 with a commencement
date for the new funding arrangements of 1 July 2009.
COAG also agreed for jurisdictions, as appropriate, to move
to a more nationally-consistent approach to activity-based funding for services
provided in public hospitals but one which also reflects the Community Service
Obligations required for the maintenance of small and regional hospital
services.[5]
At the March 2008 COAG meeting, a new model for federal
financial relations and modernisation of payments for special purposes was
agreed. The Commonwealth also announced an immediate allocation of one billion
dollars to the public hospital system, half of which was to be provided in
2007–08. Funding of $9.7 billion for public hospitals was announced for
2008–09.[6]
At the 29 November 2008 COAG meeting, the new National
Healthcare Agreement (NHA) was announced. Under the measures agreed, the
Commonwealth provided $60.5 billion over five years with $4.8 billion in
additional base Specific Purpose Pyament funding.[7]
In addition, the Commonwealth committed to a more generous indexation formula
which delivered 7.3 per cent per year compared to 5.3 per cent under the
previous agreement.
The Intergovernmental Agreement on Federal Financial
Relations (IGA) provided for the growth factor for the National Healthcare
SPP. The growth factor is defined as the product of:
- a health-specific cost index (AIHW price index);
- the growth in population estimates weighted for hospital
utilisation; and
- a technology factor (the Productivity Commission-derived index of
technology growth).[8]
The National Health and Hospital Network Agreement was
announced in April 2010. COAG, with the exception of Western Australia, reached
agreement on significant reforms to the health and hospitals system – the
establishment of a National Health and Hospitals Network. The National Health
and Hospitals Network Agreement combined reforms to the financing of the
Australian health and hospital system with major changes to the governance
arrangements between the Commonwealth and the States to deliver better health
and hospital services.
The National Health Reform Agreement
In February 2011, heads of agreement on
National Health Reform were negotiated by COAG and in August 2011 the National
Health Reform Agreement (NHRA) was signed by all states, territories and the
Commonwealth under the framework for federal financial relations.[9] This agreement
supersedes the NHHNA.[10]
A range of other agreements have also been revised:
The Council of Australian Governments (COAG) has also agreed
to a revised National Partnership Agreement on Improving Public Hospital
Services (following the National Partnership Agreement on Improving Public
Hospital Services Expert Panel Report) as well as amendments to the National
Healthcare Agreement and the Intergovernmental Agreement of Federal Financial
Relations.[11]
The NHRA is part of the broader National Health Reforms
(NHR) which are also supported by the following agreements between the
Commonwealth and state and territory:
- National Partnership Agreement on eHealth;
- National Partnership Agreement on Closing the Gap in Indigenous
Health Outcomes;
- National Partnership Agreement on Hospital and Health Workforce
Reform;
- National Partnership Agreement on the Elective Surgery Waiting
List Reduction Plan;
- National Partnership Agreement on Preventive Health (NPAPH); and
- National Partnership Agreement on Health Infrastructure.[12]
The NHRA aims to deliver a national unified and locally
controlled heath system through:
- Introducing new financial arrangements for the Commonwealth
and states and territories in partnership
- Confirming state and territories' lead role in
public health and as system managers for public hospital services
- Improving patient access to services and public
hospital efficiency through the use of activity based funding (ABF) based on a
national efficient price
- Ensuring the sustainability of funding for public
hospitals by increasing the Commonwealth's share of public hospital funding
through an increased contribution to the costs of growth
- Improving the transparency of public hospital
funding through a National Health Funding Pool
-
Improving local accountability and responsiveness
to the needs of communities through the establishment of local hospital
networks (LHNs) and Medicare locals
- New national performance standards and better
outcomes for hospital patients.[13]
States, territories and the Commonwealth are
jointly responsible for funding public hospital services under the NHRA. An
activity based funding model is used where practicable and block funding is
used in other cases. Activity based funding replaced the previous arrangements
whereby the states and territories received block grants, negotiated through
health care agreements. The NHRA also explains how states will go about
budgeting for public hospitals under an activity based funding system and how
activity based funding will affect other Commonwealth funding streams to the
states for health care.
The funded services are provided for under the
NHRA:
Under the Agreement, the scope of public hospital
services that are funded on an activity or block grant basis and are eligible
for a Commonwealth funding contribution currently includes:
- All admitted and non-admitted services
- All emergency department services provided by a
recognised emergency department
- Other outpatient, mental health, sub-acute services
and other services that could reasonably be considered a public hospital
service.[14]
For services outside the scope of the
agreement, such as dental services, primary care, home and community care, residential
aged care and pharmaceuticals, public hospitals continue to receive funding
from other sources, including the Commonwealth, states and territories.[15]
To implement and administer the agreement, a
National Health Funding Pool (NHFP) has been established under Commonwealth,
state and territory legislation. The NHFP is administered by an Administrator
who is a statutory office holder distinct from Commonwealth and state and
territory government departments.
The Administrator and Acting Administrator are
appointed by the Standing Council on Health (SCoH). An Acting Administrator is
responsible for acting in the role of the Administrator during any period when
the office is vacant.
The National Health Funding Pool is the
collective term for the state pool accounts of all states and territories. A
state pool accounts is a Reserve Bank account established by a state or
territory for the purpose of receiving all Commonwealth and activity based
state and territory NHR funding, and for making payments under the Agreement.[16]
The National Health Funding Body (NHFB) has
also been established as an independent statutory authority to assist the
Administrator in performing his or her functions:
The Administrator is responsible for ensuring
that state and territory deposits into the pool accounts, and payments from the
pool accounts to local hospital networks are made in accordance with directions
from the responsible State or Territory Minister, and in line with the
Agreement. The Administrator is also responsible for calculating the
Commonwealth public health funding contribution to states and territories and
ensuring funds are deposited into pool accounts accordingly and in line with
the Agreement. In addition, the Administrator is responsible for reconciling
estimated and actual service volumes, authorising payment instructions, and
reporting on all activities for the National Health Funding Pool.[17]
Several other bodies have also been
established to support the implementation of the NHRA, including:
- the Independent Hospital Pricing Authority;
- the National Health Performance Authority; and
- the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in
Healthcare.[18]
The Administrator of the National Health
Funding Pool provides a range of reports, including monthly reports of NHR funding
at a national, state or territory level, and local hospital network level for
each state and territory. The monthly national reports also include information
on the NHR payments to states and territories.
Sources of NHR
funding are divided into four categories:
- Commonwealth ABF funding represents acute admitted public, acute admitted private,
non-admitted, and emergency department service categories, which are funded
through the state pool account and subsequently paid to local hospital
networks.
- Commonwealth Block funding represents mental health, small rural and metropolitan hospitals,
sub-acute, teaching, training and research, and other categories, which are paid
to state managed funds.
- Commonwealth Other funding represents other amounts transacted through the state pool account and
subsequently paid to state or territory health departments. This currently
represents the Commonwealth contribution to public health.
- State/territory funding
represents funding contributions paid in by states and territories into their
own state pool account, and subsequently paid to local hospital networks within
the state or territory and/or to state or territory health departments.[19]
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