Challenges in health and health care for Australia

Med J Aust. 2007 Nov 5;187(9):485-9. doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2007.tb01383.x.

Abstract

The next Australian Government will confront major challenges in the funding and delivery of health care. These challenges derive from: Changes in demography and disease patterns as the population ages, and the burden of chronic illness grows; Increasing costs of medical advances and the need to ensure that there are comprehensive, efficient and transparent processes for assessing health technologies; Problems with health workforce supply and distribution; Persistent concerns about the quality and safety of health services; Uncertainty about how best to balance public and private sectors in the provision and funding of health services; Recognition that we must invest more in the health of our children; The role of urban planning in creating healthy and sustainable communities; and Understanding that achieving equity in health, especially for Indigenous Australians, requires more than just providing health care services. The search for effective and lasting solutions will require a consultative approach to deciding the nation's priority health problems and to designing the health system that will best address them; issues of bureaucratic and fiscal responsibility can then follow.

MeSH terms

  • Australia
  • Chronic Disease / economics
  • Demography
  • Health Care Costs
  • Health Care Reform*
  • Health Status Disparities
  • Health Workforce
  • Humans
  • Insurance, Health
  • Medical Errors / prevention & control
  • Medical Laboratory Science / economics
  • National Health Programs*
  • Politics
  • Preventive Health Services
  • Quality Assurance, Health Care
  • Urbanization