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Health insurance premiums to rise again

Labor estimates families will be slugged an extra $200 a year after the federal government approved hikes to health insurance premiums.

Mar 02, 2016, updated Mar 02, 2016
Photo: AAP/Mick Tsikas

Photo: AAP/Mick Tsikas

Premiums will increase on average by 5.59 per cent from April 1, down from almost 6.2 per cent last year.

It comes after Health Minister Sussan Ley stepped in, asking insurers in January to either lower their premium increases or justify the hikes.

Ley said 20 health funds had resubmitted a lower increase, with some cutting back as much as 1.5 per cent, easing costs for more than 93 per cent of Australians with private health cover.

“Consumers will be $125 million better off as a direct result of our request for insurers to resubmit lower premiums,” Ley said.

Labor’s health spokeswoman Catherine King says it was good the government went back to insurers and made them negotiate.

“But frankly these are still very high price premium increases,” she told ABC radio on Wednesday.

“Here is the government increasing the private health insurance premiums by more than three times the inflation rate.”

Ley said the approvals were the first step in a broader overhaul of private health insurance, in a bid to deliver lasting savings for consumers.

A government survey on private health insurance last year received more than 40,000 responses, with the majority concerned about rising premiums and value for money from policies.

Ley said the government was looking at greater transparency around health policies, targeting so-called “junk” policies, confusing terminology and hidden payments.

It’s also working to change the way private health insurers are required to pay for medical devices such as pacemakers, with savings expected to begin flowing to consumers from next year.

Under existing rules, a pacemaker for a private patient can cost the insurer $43,000 compared with $17,000 if they were treated as a public patient, which drives premiums higher.

“The current premium approvals process isn’t providing the right checks and balances to ensure consumers get the best deal every year and there are clearly significant additional costs and barriers blocking larger premium savings from being passed on,” she said.

“I know every health insurance premium increase is hard on the household budget and we’re committed to taking the pressure off price rises for consumers through sensible and balanced reforms.”

PREMIUM INCREASES BY THE BIGGEST FUNDS IN 2016

Medibank – 5.64pct (compared with 6.59pct in 2015)

Bupa – 5.69pct (6.50pct)

HCF – 5.42pct (6.50pct)

NIB – 5.55pct (6.55pct)

HBF – 4.94pct (5.96pct)

Industry average – 5.59pct (6.18pct)

AAP

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