Saturday, 25 May 2019
Quotes of the Week
“Donald Trump has
traits of a dictator and after he managed to get out of the Mueller
investigation, he turned on the heat and is becoming more and more dismissive
of the basic measures of democracy such as free press and the rule of law. I
cannot really believe that I am writing these words in reference to America, as
from where I came from, America seemed to be the only place where free press
and the rule of law mattered. Donald Trump is attacking the blood vessels of
democracy and it’s really hard to watch what he is doing to this country…” [Journalist
Ksenija Pavlovic, The Pavlovic Today,
23 May 2019]
“I have always believed in miracles! I'm standing with the three biggest
miracles in my life here tonight - and tonight we've been delivered
another one…..God bless Australia!” [Prime Minister &
Liberal MP for Cook Scott ‘Liar From The Shire’ Morrison in
his victory speech after
his government won re-election, 18 May 2019]
Labels:
Donald Trump,
Scott Morrison
Tweet of the Week
Scott Morrison’s new tourism campaign pic.twitter.com/xmTlCk5F7o— Mark Humphries (@markhumphries) May 23, 2019
Labels:
Australian politics
Friday, 24 May 2019
The 2019 federal election is over - so now the Morrison Government cuts are on again
Patient to GP Ratio [RACGP, General Practice: Health of the Nation, 2018] |
Having waited until the 18 May 2019 federal election was over, Prime Minister 'Liar from the Shire' Morrison 7 his cronies are rolling out the funding pennypinching once more - and it's no surprise that it's the very young, very old and the poor who are the targets again.
Bulk billing of children
and pensioners, as well as home visits to elderly and dying patients, could be
scrapped in outer metro areas across Australia because of cuts which doctors
say they will not be able to afford.
An incoming change to
bulk-billing incentives has pushed GPs to breaking point, medical groups have
warned, requiring them to provide crucial primary health services for less than
the cost of a barber's cut.
The Federal Government
has changed a key geographical classification, scrapping some outer suburban
zones of incentives intended for rural areas.
From January 2020, the
bulk-billing incentive in outer metro areas will be reduced from about $10 to
$6 per patient, per visit.
The changes will affect
GP practices in as many as 13 outer metro regions, including in Canberra,
Adelaide's south, the New South Wales Central Coast, Geelong and the Mornington
Peninsula.
The Australian Medical
Association SA president, Dr Chris Moy, said many of the affected regions are
low socio-economic areas.
He said the changes
could put more pressure on already costly hospital systems, because patients
could no longer afford to visit their GPs regularly.
"This is an example
of a just a small change. It's not a huge change, but it's enough to break the
camel's back," he said.
"It's more
difficult for individuals to pay a gap in those situations so it's unfortunate
this has happened."
Royal
Australian College of General Practitioners president Harry Nespolon said
general practitioners in the city and in the country were effectively being
asked to work for free.
"The Medicare
rebates are insufficient to provide the care that patients need," Dr
Nespolon said.
"I don't think
people want their GPs to do work for nothing but that's effectively what we're
being asked to do.
"If the services
become marginal in the sense they don't cover their costs, then they've got a
choice — they can either go out of business or charge a fee.
"GPs in practices
everywhere, rural or otherwise, are considering whether or not the current
amount of rebate if they do bulk bill a patient is able to keep them in
business."…….
Quick explanation of rebates:
· The
Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) is a list of medical services for which the
Australian Government provides a Medicare rebate.
· Each
MBS item has its own scheduled fee — this is the amount the Government
considers appropriate for a particular service (e.g. getting a blood test or
seeing a psychologist).
· Rebates
are typically paid as a percentage of the Medicare scheduled fee. In the case
of GP consultations, the rebate is 100 per cent of the schedule fee.
· This
means that bulk-billing GPs agree to charge patients the Medicare schedule fee
($37.60 for a standard appointment) and are directly reimbursed by the
Government, and there is no cost to the patient.
· GPs
who don't bulk bill charge a fee higher than the Medicare schedule fee, meaning
patients must pay the difference between the schedule fee and the doctor's fee
— out of their own pocket.
· For
example, if your doctor charges $75 for a standard consultation, you'll pay $75
and receive a rebate of $37.60 — leaving you $37.40 worse off.
According to the federal Dept. of Health areas which will be losing the higher bulkbilling incentives (for treatment of patients with concession cards and children under 16 years) include:
Mandurah (WA)
Mornington Peninsula
(Vic)
Canberra (ACT)
Newcastle (NSW)
Central Coast (NSW)
Queanbeyan (NSW)
Maitland (NSW)
Sunshine Coast (Qld)
Gawler (SA)
Geelong (Vic)
Melton (Vic)
Pakenham (Vic)
Ellenbrook (WA)
Baldivis (WA).
However the existing patient to GP ratio in an area is not necessarily the primary factor in determining who is on or off this list.
It seems you only have to live in an area where the local town/city has grown to over 20,000 residents since 1991 to find GPs being deprived of the full incentive payment per concession card/child patient seen.
Anyone living in the regions mentioned will know that what can appear to be a comfortable patient to GP ratio is not always evenly spread and in some areas certain GPs have already closed their books and are not taking new patients or are having difficulty attracting new GPs to established practices to fill unmet needs.
Just to make matters clear. some of the named places which will see GP incentive payments reduced on 1 July fall into the categories of regional or peri-urban area and, as at 30 June 2018 Australia-wide there were only 6,994 GPs in Inner Regional areas and 3,285 GPs in Outer Regional areas, according the the federal Dept. of Health statistics.
It seems you only have to live in an area where the local town/city has grown to over 20,000 residents since 1991 to find GPs being deprived of the full incentive payment per concession card/child patient seen.
Anyone living in the regions mentioned will know that what can appear to be a comfortable patient to GP ratio is not always evenly spread and in some areas certain GPs have already closed their books and are not taking new patients or are having difficulty attracting new GPs to established practices to fill unmet needs.
Just to make matters clear. some of the named places which will see GP incentive payments reduced on 1 July fall into the categories of regional or peri-urban area and, as at 30 June 2018 Australia-wide there were only 6,994 GPs in Inner Regional areas and 3,285 GPs in Outer Regional areas, according the the federal Dept. of Health statistics.
Labels:
health,
Health Services,
Medicare,
Morrison Government
Where Australia's finances stand ahead of the convening of the 46th federal parliament
Given that Australian
Prime Minister Scott ‘liar from the shire’ Morrison has
already signalled that he does not intend to allow truth to interfere with his
political rhetoric – describing truth telling as verballing that he “won’t
be allowing to happen” – now is perhaps the time to remind
ourselves of the truth about the nation’s finances under Morrison & Co ahead
of the commencement of the 46th Parliament.
According to
the Dept. of Finance the Morrison
Government’s Assets
and Liabilities as at 31 March 2019 (12 days out from the start of the
2019 federal election caretaker period) were:
•
net worth minus $450.5 billion;
•
net debt $376.7 billion; and
•
net financial liabilities $656.4 billion.
In March 2019
the general government sector’s total revenue fell short of its total expenses
by $1.5 billion.
The Australian
Office of Financial Management reported on 17 May 2019 (the day before
the federal election) that the face value of Australian Government borrowings
(ie the national debt) stood at $538.2 billion.
The Reserve Bank of Australia’s May 2019 Statement
on Monetary Policy - Economic Outlook has expected Gross
Domestic Product (GDP) growth for the year ending in June 2019 at 1¾%, revised down from 2½% due to a
slower domestic economy.
Labels:
debt,
deficit,
Finance,
Morrison Government
Thursday, 23 May 2019
Kevin Hogan still pretending he went to the May 2019 federal election as an Independent now surfaces as the Nationals MP he always was
MP for Page Kevin Hogan while remaining a member of the parliamentary National Party of Australia, while still the Party's Whip in the House of Representatives and the Liberal-Nationals Coaltion Government's Deputy Speaker, attempted for over 8 months to pass himself off as an Independent sitting on the cross benches.
During those 8 months Hogan routinely voted with his government.
He used this political deceit in order to hold on to his chance for re-election on 18 May 2019, when he like many other government MPs and Senators thought it was likely that they would lose government.
Of course ahead of the federal election being declared he still sought and received National Party preselection as its candidate in the seat of Page.
The Murdoch media assisted this deceit by referring to him as sitting on the cross benches.
Now that the Coalition has been returned to government at the recent election and is preparing to sit on the right hand benches of the 46th Parliament, Hogan has finally abandoned his pretence and announced that voilĂ ! he is a National Party MP once more and will sit once more on the government benches.
Government benches which in fact he was mostly found on even when pretending to be a cross bencher.
The flim flam man Scott Morrison knew when he dissolved the Australian Parliament that he wouldn't be giving anyone a new tax cut this financial year
In June 2018 the Australian Parliament passed the first year of this 2018-19 Budget item:
Step 1: immediate tax
relief for low and middle income earners
The first step
will deliver tax relief to low and middle income earners to help with cost of
living pressures.
The low and middle
income tax offset will provide tax relief of up to $530 to low and middle
income earners for the 2018-19, 2019-20, 2020-21 and 2021-22 income years.
The offset will assist over 10 million Australians and around 4.4 million people will receive the full $530 benefit for 2018-19. The benefit is in addition to the existing low income tax offset, and will be available on assessment after a taxpayer lodges their tax return.
The offset will assist over 10 million Australians and around 4.4 million people will receive the full $530 benefit for 2018-19. The benefit is in addition to the existing low income tax offset, and will be available on assessment after a taxpayer lodges their tax return.
With regard to this tax relief Australian
Taxation Office stated:
A new low
and middle income tax offset applies for 2018–19, 2019–20, 2020–21 and 2021–22
income years.
Australian
resident individuals (and certain trustees) whose income does not exceed
$125,333 are entitled to the new low and middle income tax offset. Entitlement
to the new offset is in addition to the existing low income tax offset, and is
available on assessment after you lodge your income tax return.
If your
income:
·
does not
exceed $37,000 you are entitled to $200
·
exceeds
$37,000 but does not exceed $48,000, you are entitled to $200 plus 3% of the
amount of the income that exceeds $37,000
·
exceeds
$48,000 but not $90,000, you are entitled to $530
·
exceeds
$90,000 you are entitled to $530 less 1.5% of the amount of the income that
exceeds $90,000.
It would appear that Morrison then changed the details of this tax offset* and the wording in the 2019-20 Budget papers reads:
Immediate tax
relief for low- and middle‑income earners of up to $1,080 for singles
or up to $2,160 for dual income families to ease the cost of living.
While remaining silent on the fact that this change no longer specified that this new offset amount would be legislated by 30 June - letting the media and voters assume that he was still intending to deliver the second tax offset by end of June 2019.
On April 8 (three days before Morrison called the election) The New Daily reported that: The Australian Tax Office has warned the government it will not deliver planned $1080 tax cuts from July 1, unless they can be rushed through Parliament before the end of the financial year.
On April 8 (three days before Morrison called the election) The New Daily reported that: The Australian Tax Office has warned the government it will not deliver planned $1080 tax cuts from July 1, unless they can be rushed through Parliament before the end of the financial year.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison via @iborgward |
When Scott Morrison appeared to promise workers on up to $125,00 per annum to be delivered by 30 June 2019 as a tax offset he knew that the timetable for any federal election is a set one.
This means that no later than 110 days after the election writs are issued they have to be returned.
Only after that can the 46th Australian Parliament begin its deliberations and legislate election promises.
In the 2019 federal general election the writs were issued on 11 April 2019. This was Morrison's personal choice as he called on the Governor-General the day before.
That means writs have to be returned by 20 July 2019.
At the 2013 federal election the writs were returned in 100 days and at 2016 federal election writs were returned in 84 days.
Morrison is now saying that the 2019 writs will probably not be returned until around 28-30 June 2019.
There is no way that during the election campaign when he was repeating his promise of an immediate cash tax offset that he had not calculated that the election writs wouldn't be returned in under 74-76 days.
The seventy-fourth day is Friday 28 June 2019. There is no way that the Australian Parliament can convene before the start of the next financial year.
Those who expected to see a $1,080 to $2,160 reduction in their tax liability anytime soon may well be waiting a full twelve months until 30 June 2020 to see the promised tax offset land.
Meanwhile Morrison and Frydenberg with an 'Ooops! Sooo sorry' probably see this move as cleverly saving money at workers' expense in order to help their government's fiscal bottom line in the face of a slowing economy.
Morrison's new 'promise' as of 21 May 2019 is that he will deliver the promised tax offset sometime in the 2019-20 fiscal year.
All of which confirms his lack of political integrity.
Note
* A tax offset reduces the amount of tax payable on an individual's annual income. It doesn't necessarily result in an Australian Taxation Office cash refund.
Wednesday, 22 May 2019
The Abbott-Turnbull-Morrison Federal Government still hasn't made personal health data secure
Since about 2014 it has been known that the personal details of Medicare
cardholders has been for sale on the dark web.
Despite an April
2014 report by the Australian
National Audit Office that the Consumer
Directory - which contains all Medicare customer records - was not secure
and that cardholder
details were for sale, the federal Liberal-Nationals
Coalition Government does not appear to have comprehensively acted act on
the issue of database security.
It was not
unknown that Medicare cardholder details were being used fraudulently.
When contacted
by the mainstream media in July 2017 the Liberal MP for Aston and then Minister for Human Services Alan Tudge denied
any prior knowledge of cardholder details being offered for sale.
It was not reported that at the time if he was asked about instances of Medicare cardholder details being used to commit fraud or identity theft.
In August 2017 eHealth Privacy Australia was telling
the Senate Finance and Public Administration Committee that:
•
There are fundamental weaknesses in both the HPOS (Medicare card data) and My Health
Records systems, which make them vulnerable to illegal access.
•
Those weaknesses mean that fraudulent users of the systems can assume the
identity of legitimate users to gain illegal access.
•
It is not sufficient to mitigate these weaknesses in the My Health Records system.
By 1 January
2019 IT
News was
reporting that Medicare cardholder details fraudulently obtained had been used to access an individual’s My Health Record:
The number of data
breaches involving the My Health Record system rose from 35 to 42 in the past
financial year, new figures show.
The Australian Digital
Health Agency (ADHA) said in its annual report [pdf] that “42 data breaches (in 28
notifications) were reported to the Office of the Australian Information
Commissioner” in 2017-18.
As with previous years,
the agency said that “no purposeful or malicious attacks compromising the
integrity or security of the My Health Record system” were reported in the
period.
Of the 42 breaches, one was the result of “unauthorised
access to a My Health Record as a result of an incorrect Parental Authorised
Representative being assigned to a child”, the agency reported.
A further two breaches were from “suspected fraud against
the Medicare program where the incorrect records appearing in the My Health
Record of the affected individual were also viewed without authority by the
individual undertaking the suspected fraudulent activity”, ADHA said.
In addition, 17 breaches were the result of “data
integrity activity initiated by the Department of Human Services to identify
intertwined Medicare records (that is, where a single Medicare record has been
used interchangeably between two or more individuals)”, the agency said. [my
yellow highlighting]
Despite this
knowledge the Abbott-Turnbull-Morrison
Government has still not grasped the nettle, because on 16 May 2019 The
Guardian reported:
Australians’ Medicare
details are still being illegally offered for sale on the darknet, almost two
years after Guardian Australia revealed the serious privacy breach.
Screenshots of the
Empire Market, provided to Guardian Australia, show the vendor Medicare Machine
has rebranded as Medicare Madness, offering Medicare details for $US21.
Other vendors charge up
to $US340 by offering fake Medicare cards alongside other fake forms of
identification – such as a New South Wales licence.
The Medicare Madness
listing suggests the Medicare details “of any living Australian citizen” have
been available since September 2018.
Guardian Australia first
reported patient details were on sale in July 2017, verifying the listing
by requesting the data of a Guardian staff member and warning that Medicare
card numbers could be used for identity theft and fraud.
The revelation
prompted a
review lead by former secretary of the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet
Peter Shergold.
The report did not
identify the source of the Medicare data leak but suggested that people could
use publicly available information about healthcare providers – including their
provider number and practice location – to pass security checks and obtain a
Medicare card number through the Department of Human Services provider hotline.
The review panel warned
the “current security check for release of Medicare card information provides a
much lower level of confidence than the security requirements” for Health Professional
Online Services, the portal that allows providers to make rebate claims.
An IT industry source,
who refused to be named, said the re-emergence of the data breach brings into
question government assurances around the privacy of medical data “when those
responsible cannot even manage the security of Medicare cards”.
The source said there is
a “concerted effort at the moment by law enforcement to curtail darknet market
activity”.
“In reality the darknet
markets, while disrupted momentarily when their sites are brought down, easily
relocate and continue business.”
Darknet markets can
simply private message existing clients with a new link to resume business
elsewhere. [my yellow highlighting]
Thus far the federal government has failed to recognise where Medicare cardholder details may be being accessed unlawfully, as this 2 August 2018 ABC online article indicates:
Privacy experts have warned that the system
opens up health records to more people than ever before, thereby increasing the
threat surface — the number of vulnerabilities in a system — dramatically.
Dr Bernard Robertson
Dunn, who chairs the health committee at the foundation, says once the data is
downloaded into the health system, the My Health record system cannot guarantee
privacy.
"Once the data has
been downloaded to, for instance, a hospital system, the protections of the
hospital system apply, and then the audit logs apply to the hospital system —
not to My Health record.
"So there is no way
the Government would know who has accessed that data, and it is untraceable and
untrackable that that access has occurred."
Labels:
big data,
data breach,
information technology,
Medicare,
My Health Record,
privacy,
safety
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