The perfect blend: getting flexible GP funding right
This policy brief argues that Australia should move to blended funding for general practice. But how much funding should be flexible, and how much should remain fee-for-service? Around the world, blended funding has become a common way to fund general practice. It combines a flexible budget for each patient with a fee for each service.
Today, the federal government funds general practice almost entirely through fee-for-service payments. The Medicare Benefits Schedule pays for each individual service delivered, and mostly only for care delivered by GPs. This rewards short, one-off consultations and limits team-based care.
The opposite funding model is called capitation: the GP clinic gets a fixed budget for each patient, adjusted up or down depending on the patient’s predicted healthcare needs. That budget doesn’t change if they get a lot of care, a little, or none at all.
Each way of funding care has benefits and drawbacks. Blended models are designed to balance them to get the best result.
Making it work requires the right design, and one choice matters more than any other: how much funding is flexible, and how much remains fee-for-service. But there is little research on how to strike the right balance. This policy brief helps fill that gap.
