The Australian healthcare system is characterized by a mix of public and private financing and provision of healthcare services. The health insurance system consists of a National Health Insurance/Service and voluntary private health insurance (PHI). The latter is regulated through the Private Insurance Act (2007) which established a complex mix of subsidies and regulatory instruments (e.g., community rating, open enrollment, ad valorem premium-subsidies and tax-incentives), and provides for the operation and administration of the Risk Equalization Trust Fund. The Australian health plan payment scheme constitutes a combination of risk sharing and risk equalization. The duplicative nature of the current private/public mix (those with PHI rem...
none2siIn April 2007, the ‘Reinsurance’ arrangements in place since 1956 were replaced by a ‘Risk Eq...
Improving risk-equalisation in health insurance markets: Lessons from the Australian mode
By 1997 only about 30% of the population in Australia was covered by private health insurance. Using...
The Australian healthcare system is characterized by a mix of public and private financing and provi...
In April 2007, Australia introduced a risk equalisation (RE) scheme (de facto a claims equalisation ...
In April 2007, Australia introduced a risk equalisation (RE) scheme (de facto a claims equalisation ...
In the 40 years since the introduction of universal public health insurance in Australia, there has ...
This paper outlines a model of the Australian private health insurance industry embedded within Aust...
This working paper from the National Centre for Epidemiology & Population Health outlines a mode...
open3noThe aims of this paper are to evaluate the risk equalisation (RE) arrangement in Australia’s ...
The aims of this paper are to evaluate the risk equalisation (RE) arrangement in Australia’s private...
Private Health Insurance (PHI) is an integral part of the financing of the Australian health care sy...
Background: The appropriate structure, scope and cost of government incentives in the private health...
ISSN 1328-4991 (Print) ISSN 1447-5863 (Online) ISBN 073403122X MIWP No. 10/03This paper develops a m...
Australia\u2019s existing health-financing arrangements lead to partial duplication in coverage for ...
none2siIn April 2007, the ‘Reinsurance’ arrangements in place since 1956 were replaced by a ‘Risk Eq...
Improving risk-equalisation in health insurance markets: Lessons from the Australian mode
By 1997 only about 30% of the population in Australia was covered by private health insurance. Using...
The Australian healthcare system is characterized by a mix of public and private financing and provi...
In April 2007, Australia introduced a risk equalisation (RE) scheme (de facto a claims equalisation ...
In April 2007, Australia introduced a risk equalisation (RE) scheme (de facto a claims equalisation ...
In the 40 years since the introduction of universal public health insurance in Australia, there has ...
This paper outlines a model of the Australian private health insurance industry embedded within Aust...
This working paper from the National Centre for Epidemiology & Population Health outlines a mode...
open3noThe aims of this paper are to evaluate the risk equalisation (RE) arrangement in Australia’s ...
The aims of this paper are to evaluate the risk equalisation (RE) arrangement in Australia’s private...
Private Health Insurance (PHI) is an integral part of the financing of the Australian health care sy...
Background: The appropriate structure, scope and cost of government incentives in the private health...
ISSN 1328-4991 (Print) ISSN 1447-5863 (Online) ISBN 073403122X MIWP No. 10/03This paper develops a m...
Australia\u2019s existing health-financing arrangements lead to partial duplication in coverage for ...
none2siIn April 2007, the ‘Reinsurance’ arrangements in place since 1956 were replaced by a ‘Risk Eq...
Improving risk-equalisation in health insurance markets: Lessons from the Australian mode
By 1997 only about 30% of the population in Australia was covered by private health insurance. Using...