
Health insurers are increasingly investing in and partnering with GP centres and telehealth services, expanding beyond dental and optometry services.
It has raised concerns that it could create a two-tier system in which privately insured patients have more affordable access to GP consults, and doctors are encouraged to refer to insurer-preferred specialists.
What's next?
The AMA and others are calling for a private health regulatory body to oversee the health insurance industry.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-03-23/calls-for-closer-look-as-private-insurers-move-into-gp-clinics/106337010?utm_source=abc_news_app&utm_medium=content_shared&utm_campaign=abc_news_app&utm_content=other
5 Comments
How about they put this shit to a vote? Ask the public whether we should continue to prop up the efforts to move to a US style system.
Imagine if all the money, and all the labour that goes into the private health system, both practitioners and the admin behind the insurance, going into the public system. Added bonus, in that there are no shareholders leeching profits off the whole thing.
If there is *anything* we could learn from America (of the many many many things we could), keeping health insurers regulated into a corner where they can’t do harm is a big one.
Health is not a commodity. It’s not something we can buy later if ours breaks. We can’t go with a cheaper model, or substitute a replacement.
Health is the absolute necessity of every ‘consumer’.
Any CEO who seeks profit here is incentivised to put a dollar sign on your life – and from there, calculate whether they make more money by jacking costs to a point you can’t afford (but others can).
You want a redline for when we’re embracing the worst of America? Healthcare is arguably the biggest one.
Isn’t this a move towards the US style of medicine? As in you won’t be able to see a specialist of your choice, it will have to be an “in network” specialist?
>it has raised concerns that it could create a two-tier system in which privately insured patients have more affordable access to GP consults
Sorry how? Insurance premiums are massive, yet you can realistically see the GP for free?