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Report on Government Services 2024

PART E: RELEASED ON 31 JANUARY 2024

E Health

Data downloads

These data tables relate to the sector as a whole. Data specific to individual service areas is in the data tables under the relevant service area.

Note: Data tables are referenced by table xA.1, xA.2, etc, with x referring to the section or overview. For example, table EA.1 refers to data table 1 for this sector overview.

Main aims of services within the sector

The main objective of the health sector is that Australians are born and remain healthy. To this end, health sector services seek to promote, restore and maintain a healthy society through the delivery of services that prevent illness, promote health, detect and treat illness and injury, rehabilitate and provide palliative care.

Services included in the sector

  • Primary and community health
    Includes general practice, pharmaceutical services, dentistry, allied health services, maternal and child health, alcohol and drug treatment and other services.
  • Ambulance services
    Includes responding to and treating out-of-hospital medical emergencies.
  • Public hospitals
    Includes care provided to admitted and non-admitted patients, including acute and non-acute care and mental health services.
  • Services for mental health
    Includes MBS-subsidised mental health services provided by primary and community health providers, state and territory government specialised mental health services and non-government services providing community-based support.

Other major areas of government involvement in health provision not covered in the health sections, or elsewhere in the report, include public health programs (other than those for mental health) and funding for specialist medical practitioners (although data on patient out-of-pocket costs for specialist services are provided as contextual information in the Primary and community health section).

Detailed information on the equity, effectiveness and efficiency of service provision and the achievement of outcomes for primary and community health, ambulance, public hospital and services for mental health are contained in service-specific sections.

Government expenditure in the sector

Total government recurrent expenditure for health services for the latest years covered in this report was $150.9 billion. Public hospitals was the largest contributor ($90.0 billion in 2021-22, table 12A.1), followed by primary and community health ($55.4 billion in 2021-22, table 10A.1) and ambulance services ($5.5 billion in 2022-23, table 11A.11). Expenditure on services for mental health was $11.6 billion in 2021-22 (table 13A.1); however, as much of this expenditure is already captured in public hospital and primary and community health expenditure, it is not included in the health sector expenditure total to avoid double counting. For the 2021-22 financial year (the most recent financial year for which data is available across all sections) this represented 43.1% of total government expenditure covered in this report.

When expenditure by local government and for health services outside the scope of this report are added, government expenditure in 2021-22 was estimated at $176.0 billion (AIHW 2023).

Flows in the sector

Health services in Australia are delivered by a variety of government and non‑government providers in a range of service settings that do not have a clearly defined path (figure E.1). Primary and community health services are the most common entry points to the health system in Australia. Ambulance services and public hospital emergency departments can also be first points of contact. Some patients may then progress through the system to become non-admitted or admitted hospital patients (including specialist mental health care) or medical specialist patients. Patients might cycle through various points in the health system for treatment of a particular condition. Finally, some patients will require rehabilitation provided by hospitals or primary and community health services.

Figure E.1 Client flow within the Australian health care system


Figure E.1 - radar diagram showing the flow of clients through the Australian health system. A person is at the centre with G P, dentist, ambulance and pharmacy on the next ring, and hospital, pathology or radiology, allied health or community care and specialists on the outside ring.

Nationally in 2022, nurses and midwives made up the largest group of FTE health workers (339,883), followed by allied health practitioners (169,526) and medical practitioners (114,815). This trend was also evident for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health care workers, where nurses and midwives were the largest workforce group (5,183). Medical practitioners had the highest proportion of the workforce aged 60 years or older (15.2%), while allied health practitioners had the highest proportion aged under 30 years (26.6%) (EA.36–40).

Sector-wide indicators

This overview reports on four sector-wide indicators of governments’ objective that Australians are born and remain healthy:

  • babies born of low birthweight
  • selected potentially preventable diseases
  • life expectancy
  • mortality rates.

Data on key risk factors affecting outcomes for these indicators (including overweight/obesity, smoking and risky alcohol consumption) are available in tables EA.3, EA.7 and EA.9.

Babies born of low birthweight

In 2021, 4.9% of babies born in Australia were of low birthweight (table EA.1). The proportion of babies born of low birthweight to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander mothers was more than twice that for babies born to non-Indigenous mothers (table EA.2; figure E.2). Data on the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander status of the baby are available in table EA.1.


Selected potentially preventable diseases

Selected potentially preventable diseases are diseases that could potentially have been prevented through the provision of health interventions and early disease management. Diseases covered in this report include selected cancers, heart attacks and type 2 diabetes.

Nationally in 2020, the age standardised rate of new cases of selected cancers was highest for female breast cancer (119.5 per 100,000 females), followed by melanoma, bowel cancer, and lung cancer (49.1, 47.4 and 41.7 per 100,000 people respectively) and lowest for cervical cancer (7.5 per 100,000 females) (table EA.11). More recent data for 2021 are available for two jurisdictions (Victoria and Queensland) in table EA.11.

Nationally in 2021, the age standardised rate of heart attacks (acute coronary events) was 274.0 cases per 100,000 people (table EA.14). The national rate has decreased each year over the 10 years included in this report. The rate for females is less than half the rate for males.

Nationally in 2011-12 (the only year of data available), an estimated 4.3% of adults had type 2 diabetes, with rates higher for males compared with females (table EA.16).

Life expectancy

The average life expectancy at birth in the period 1901–1910 was 55.2 years for males and 58.8 years for females (ABS 2010). Historically, life expectancy has risen steadily each decade since, however both males (81.2 years) and females (85.3 years) reported a slight decrease in 2020–2022 (table EA.22). The life expectancy of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people is considerably lower than that of other people, with a life expectancy at birth of 71.9 years for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander males and 75.6 years for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander females born between 2020–22. For the same reference period, the life expectancy at birth for non‑Indigenous males was 80.6 years and for non‑Indigenous females was 83.8 years (table EA.23). An increase in 2022 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander deaths is influenced by the use of information from a second source for the first time when deriving the indigenous status of deaths registered in NSW (for more detail refer to the Technical notes (ABS, 2023)).

Mortality rates

The national age standardised mortality rate, measured in deaths per 100,000 people, was 547.6 in 2022 – an increase from 2021 (table EA.24; figure E.3). In line with life expectancy data, mortality rates are higher for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people compared to non-Indigenous people (table EA.25).


Perinatal and children

Mortality data is separately reported for children for perinatal deaths (fetal deaths [still births] and neonatal deaths [death of an infant within 28 days of birth]), infant deaths (children aged 0<1 year) and infant and child deaths (children aged 0<5 years).

There were 8.1 perinatal deaths per 1,000 births (table EA.34) in 2022, of which around 72% were fetal deaths and the remainder neonatal deaths (tables EA.32).

In 2022, the average infant mortality rate was 3.2 deaths per 1,000 live births (table EA.28). Over the past 10 years, the average infant mortality rate has ranged from 3.1 deaths per 1,000 live births (2016 and 2018) to 3.6 deaths per 1,000 live births (2013). The Australian infant and child combined mortality rate (3-year average) has decreased over time from 91.5 deaths per 100,000 population in 2010-12 to 74.4 deaths per 100,000 population in 2019-21 (table EA.30).

Causes and prevention

The most common causes of death among all Australians in 2022 were neoplasms (cancer) and circulatory diseases (including heart disease, heart attack and stroke) (table EA.26). Data by Indigenous status is available in table EA.27.

There is potential to prevent some deaths through individualised care and/or to treat health conditions through existing primary or hospital care. Nationally, there were 100.1 potentially avoidable deaths per 100,000 people in 2022 – an increase on 2021 (96.9 per 100,000 people) (table EA.19). The rate of potentially avoidable deaths in 2018–22 for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people (324.1 per 100,000 people) was the highest rate since 2011-15 and more than three times the rate for other Australians (95.2) (table EA.20).


References

AIHW (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare) 2023, Health Expenditure Australia 2021-22, https://www.aihw.gov.au/getmedia/b464ddb8-ccb4-4093-acd4-3655176599dc/health-expenditure-australia-2021-22.pdf?v=20231025081735&inline=true.

ABS (Australian Bureau of Statistics) 2010, Deaths Australia 2009, https://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/Products/16B1031FC87A6A8CCA2577D600109F8A.

ABS (Australian Bureau of Statistics) 2023, Causes of Death, Australia 2022, methodology https://www.abs.gov.au/methodologies/causes-death-australia-methodology/2022#.

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