National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation, Townsville, QLD.
Med J Aust. 2010 Feb 1;192(3):154-7. doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2010.tb03455.x.
Paying incentives above the baseline Medicare Benefits Schedule to health services for the additional work required to meet the health needs of Aboriginal people or Torres Strait Islanders might mitigate inequalities of care, but evidence supporting this is lacking. The proposed "Indigenous health" incentive payment to reduce Aboriginal health disadvantage, which is largely aimed at increasing the responsiveness of mainstream general practices, provides an opportunity to examine the assumptions behind this and other recent health reform bids. Contentious implementation issues include: the ineligibility of several Aboriginal community controlled health services (ACCHSs) to receive this payment; determining Aboriginality and the potential for misappropriation of payments; the difficulty accounting for practice population diversity and patient mobility; and concerns about the benefits or otherwise to the Aboriginal community. Evaluation of the measure will present problems: to attribute outcomes, an evaluation must disaggregate outcomes by type of service provider (general practice or ACCHS). If these challenges are not addressed, this initiative may end up merely funding coordination of care for those Aboriginal people and Torres Strait Islanders who are already regular users of the health system.
向卫生服务机构支付高于基线医疗保险福利表的激励金,以支付满足原住民或托雷斯海峡岛民健康需求所需的额外工作,可能会缓解护理不平等问题,但缺乏支持这一做法的证据。拟议的“原住民健康”激励性支付,旨在减少原住民健康方面的劣势,主要旨在提高主流全科医生的反应能力,为检验这一做法和其他最近的卫生改革方案背后的假设提供了机会。有争议的实施问题包括:有几家原住民社区控制的卫生服务机构(ACCHS)没有资格获得这项支付;确定原住民身份和潜在的资金挪用问题;难以说明实践人群的多样性和患者流动性;以及对原住民社区的利益或其他方面的担忧。这项措施的评估将带来问题:为了归因于结果,评估必须按服务提供商(全科医生或 ACCHS)的类型对结果进行细分。如果这些挑战得不到解决,这一举措最终可能只是为那些已经是卫生系统常规使用者的原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民的护理协调提供资金。