Chapter 5 Performance reporting by the states and territories
The Commonwealth [and the states] agree that the
publication of performance information against agreed indicators should occur
to improve the transparency of the performance of the public hospital system.[1]
Compliance assessment requirements
5.1
In order to qualify for the full level of funding under the AHCAs, the
states are obliged by clause 25 to meet three compliance assessment
requirements. As discussed in earlier chapters, the first two are that the
states adhere to the principles set out in clause 6 and that they match the
Commonwealth’s funding growth rate. The third compliance assessment requirement
is that the states meet the performance reporting requirements as set out in
the AHCAs.
5.2
Schedule C of the AHCAs specifies what performance related data items
the states are to provide the Commonwealth and when. Performance data is
required on, among other things, the national minimum data sets (NMDS) for
elective surgery waiting times, emergency department waiting times and
community mental health care outcomes.[2] Schedule C also commits
the states to work with the Commonwealth to develop and refine additional nominated
performance indicators – such as measures of rural and remote access to public
hospital services; indicators of effort in medical training and medical
research; and indicators of access to and quality of palliative care services.[3]
As a result of that work, the states now provide data to Health on 18 new
performance indicators in addition to those originally specified.[4]
5.3
Health developed a Compliance Monitoring and Assessment Framework (‘the
Framework’) to advise the states on the required format for the NMDS and when
it would be expected.[5] From Health’s
perspective:
…one of the challenges is really that we are monitoring eight
different health care systems.[6]
5.4
However, state representatives reported to the ANAO that they were not
being provided with sufficient detail from Health about the all performance data
that it wanted from them.[7] Indeed, the ANAO
recommended that Health provide the states with more detailed guidance of its
procedures and assessment principles in order to assist them clearly understand
Health’s processes and expectations for assessing AHCA compliance by the
states.[8] Health agreed to this
recommendation and undertook to prepare a high level principles document based
on the Framework and distribute it to the states.
5.5
Health advised the committee in March 2007 that the high levels
principles document would be distributed to the states ‘certainly before the
end of June [2007]’.[9] The committee understands
that this timetable has been met.[10] Certainly, such comprehensive
information on Health’s compliance assessment processes should be available for
the states at the commencement of the 2008-2013 AHCAs.
Public accountability
5.6
The parties to the AHCAs agree that:
…provision of data to enable timely publication of
performance information is an important element of its accountability to the
Commonwealth and the public in relation to the funding received through this
Agreement.[11]
5.7
To meet this goal for its part, the Commonwealth has committed to
publish an annual report The state of our public hospitals
which is a compilation of the performance data provided by the states.[12]
The report aims to ‘demonstrate that all governments are accountable for
expenditure on public hospitals’ and provide each year a state by state
analysis by the Commonwealth of public hospital performance.[13]
These reports have been published every year since 2004 and analyse performance
in the previous financial year.
5.8
When the June 2007 report was released, the Minister advised that
several states were reporting beyond that required by the AHCAs:
…Victoria’s Your Hospitals report and Queensland’s Public Hospitals Performance Report publish similar performance
measures to those used in this report, but at an individual hospital level.[14]
5.9
Thus, other states are to be encouraged to follow this lead by providing
reports on individual performance of their public hospitals.
5.10
The committee strongly supports the publication of public hospital
performance information and urges the Government to include a similar
publication requirement in the 2008-2013 AHCAs, and to encourage states to go
further, as shown by Victoria and Queensland, by publishing additional
information on the performance of individual hospitals.
5.11
In its report The Blame Game, the committee made two relevant
recommendations to improve the quality of public information on public hospital
performance. The first was that future AHCAs (or substitute arrangements)
include a requirement that all public hospitals gain accreditation by the
Australian Council on Healthcare Standards (or equivalent accreditation agency)
and that the accreditation reports be published within three months of
completion.[15] The second relevant
recommendation was that all state and territory governments regularly publish
reports on sentinel events occurring in their public hospitals.[16]
Sentinel events are adverse events that occur because hospital failures result
in death or serious injury.
5.12
The committee is pleased that The state of our public hospitals reports
at least the number and proportion of hospitals that are accredited in each state,
even if not which hospitals, and hopes that future editions can also include
statistics on sentinel events.
Burden of data collection on the states
5.13
State governments complained to the ANAO that the Australian Institute
of Health and Welfare (AIHW), the Productivity Commission and Health all report
on public hospital performance and that each agency requires slightly different
datasets despite them being based largely on the NMDS specified in the National
Health Data Dictionary.[17] This places an
unnecessary administrative burden on the states, but has also led to differences
in the data provided in the different Commonwealth publication series.[18]
5.14
The committee appreciates that the reports of the different agencies
serve different purposes and have different audiences. The AIHW and
Productivity Commission are collecting data for reporting purposes while Health
is seeking fiscal and performance accountability. However, the committee urges
the various Commonwealth agencies to agree on consolidated data sets which each
agency could then use for its own purposes.