MINISTER MARK BUTLER
MINISTER FOR HEALTH AND AGED CARE
The Albanese Labor Government is continuing to improve our health system: strengthening Medicare, the heart of universal healthcare, easing cost of living pressures with cheaper medicines, and embedding new mental health services in Medicare.
Our first Budgets rolled out 58 Medicare Urgent Care Clinics. This Budget adds a further 29 Medicare Urgent Care Clinics, investing $227 million so more Australians in more locations can walk in and get the urgent care they need - fully bulk-billed - without waiting hours in busy hospital emergency departments.
Our first Budgets made medicines cheaper, with lower co-payments and 60-day prescriptions already saving Australians more than $370 million. The Government has committed up to an additional $3 billion for an Eighth Community Pharmacy Agreement to strengthen community pharmacies and keep medicines cheaper. The Government will deliver a one-year freeze on the maximum co-payment for a PBS prescription for everyone with a Medicare card and up to a five-year freeze for pensioners and other Commonwealth concession cardholders. So medicines stay cheaper, instead of rising with inflation.
Our first Budgets took pressure off hospitals by making it easier to see a doctor, with the largest investment in bulk billing in the 40-year history of Medicare. This Budget delivers $882.2 million to ensure that older Australians get the medical support they need in a safe and comfortable environment when they don’t need to stay in hospital, while freeing up beds for other patients who do.
This comes on top of the Albanese Government’s commitment to significantly increase funding for public hospitals from 2025. Health Ministers have commenced negotiating the new National Health Reform Agreement Addendum to give Australians better access to healthcare services they need, when they need them, and alleviate current pressures in public hospitals across the country. The Australian Government will provide more funding to state public hospitals from 2025-2030, increasing the Commonwealth contribution to the cost of care to 45 per cent, from around 40 per cent, over the next ten years.
Overall spending on health and aged care in 2024–25 is $146.1 billion, with a five-year commitment to invest $10.7 billion, including $8.5 billion in health and $2.2 billion in aged care. This includes investments to strengthen Medicare ($2.8 billion), deliver cheaper medicines ($4.3 billion) and invest in a fit and healthy Australia ($1.3 billion).
Strengthening Medicare
The Albanese Government is strengthening Medicare with more Medicare Urgent Care Clinics, more free mental health services, higher Medicare rebates for many common medical tests, and over $160 million for a women’s health package:
Whether in person, over the phone or on a device, at a free walk-in centre or from the comfort of your bedroom, we are expanding the ways Australians can get mental healthcare. This will help people get the care they need at every stage of distress, while relieving the pressure on the current Better Access scheme to be all things to all people, which in turn will make it easier for Australians who need a psychologist to get in to see one.
Cheaper medicines
The Albanese Government is delivering cheaper medicines to ease pressure on household budgets, freezing the maximum cost of a PBS medicine, making Australia a destination for clinical trials so Australians get early access to life-changing medicines, and adding more medicines to the PBS.
A fit and healthy Australia
The Albanese Government is investing in a fit and healthy Australia, through new programs to address skin cancer, expanded access to free bowel cancer screening, efforts to realise Australia’s goal of eliminating HIV, and a boost to sports participation from the grassroots to high performance:
Women’s health
Removing the bias and barriers that hold women back in the health system will take time. That’s why the 2024–25 Budget takes important next steps to build women’s health into the foundations of a stronger Medicare, with a $49.1 million for higher Medicare rebates to see a gynaecologist for complex conditions like endometriosis, a revolutionary new medicine for breast cancer, and $56.5 million for new Medicare services for midwives to provide longer consultations before and after the birth of a child.
In Medicare’s 40th year, the 2024–25 Budget continues to strengthen Medicare after the damage caused by nine years of cuts and neglect that began when Peter Dutton started a six-year freeze to Medicare rebates and tried to abolish bulk billing by introducing a mandatory payment on every single visit to the GP.
The 2024–25 Budget extends the generational reforms to strengthen Medicare, eases cost-of-living pressures with cheaper medicines, and embeds mental health at the heart of a stronger Medicare.
As at 14 May 2024.