| Literature DB >> 15679935 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In recent years, Australian state and territory governments have reviewed and restructured the health systems they lead and regulate. This paper examines the outcomes of the most recent official published reviews of systems and structures; identifies the common themes; and addresses two questions: what problems are being addressed? And how would we know if the changes were successful?Entities:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15679935 PMCID: PMC544964 DOI: 10.1186/1743-8462-1-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aust New Zealand Health Policy ISSN: 1743-8462
Review Dateline
| 2004 | WA, NSW, Tasmania (hospitals only) | 2000 | Victoria |
| 2003 | NSW, Victoria#, SA, NT | 1996 | Tasmania, Qland, ACT |
| 2002 | ACT, | 1995 | Victoria, SA |
| 2001 | WA |
Notes: #No major structural changes recommended – focus on governance
Governance of public health care agencies in Australian states/territories
| Victoria 4.87M | Rurals partly regionalised for many years; Melbourne 'networked' since 1995. | Melbourne networks restructured from 7 to 12 and names changed in 2000. Rural structures mix of regionalised and atomised. |
| SA 1.52M | Regionalised in rural areas since 1995; Adelaide partly regionalising. | Moved from atomised to regionalised, with 2 regional and 1 specialised health services in the capital as of July 2004. |