logo
Australia scores well in managing chronic health issues

Australia scores well in managing chronic health issues

Perth Now2 days ago
Australia has a world-class health system for dealing with chronic conditions, a new survey has found.
The country was one of the top five performers in the world when it comes to the quality of care, coordination of care, person-centred care and physical health.
The findings were part of the the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) inaugural Patient-Reported Indicator Surveys.
The Paris-based body collected data from 107,000 patients and 1800 primary care practices across 19 countries, including Australia.
Achieving such high satisfaction in the personal care provided by GPs showed a world-class health system at work, The Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care's Clinical Director Liz Marles said.
Australia performed better than or close to the OECD average across all 10 areas measured in the survey.
Dr Marles pointed to how 97 per cent of Australian patients surveyed, who had a single GP for three to five years, rated their care positively describing it as an "amazing result."
"We know that where a person is able to establish a good relationship with a GP over the long term, they get much better outcomes and that leads to better trust in the system as a whole," she told AAP.
"If you see the same GP over a period of time, they get to know you as a person, get to know your preferences, understand your context and they know what's going on in your life," the practising Sydney GP said.
Nearly 2400 Australian patients aged 45 years and above, suffering from at least one chronic condition, and who visited a GP in the last six months gave feedback on their experiences and health outcomes for the survey.
The most common chronic conditions reported included high blood pressure, arthritis or ongoing back and joint pain, depression, anxiety or other mental health issues, breathing and heart conditions.
When it came to mental health, patients seeing their GPs were less than positive with Australia's ranking dipping to 13th out of 19.
Dr Marles said the other health measures of the survey where Australia could have performed better were still close to the OECD averages but that did not prevent GPs and policymakers from making care more accessible.
She pointed to geographical accessibility and financial considerations as presenting barriers to patients.
"Our goal is to help patients who have chronic conditions not only survive but to thrive," Dr Marles said.
The burden of chronic disease across the country is high, with one in two Australians having at least one chronic condition.
An eye-watering $82 billion was spent on treating chronic diseases in 2022/23.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Heartbreak to hope: Australians urged to donate organs
Heartbreak to hope: Australians urged to donate organs

West Australian

timean hour ago

  • West Australian

Heartbreak to hope: Australians urged to donate organs

Being pushed off a playground fort and breaking his arm at age nine - twice in one month - might just have saved Matthew Larman's life. The first time, abnormal liver readings had doctors worried he'd torn it but scans were clear and he went home in a cast. The second time, his mother Kylie Larman asked doctors to check the same readings again. They were still off. That prompted six months of investigation and eventually a biopsy. While on holiday, Ms Larman got the call: her son was being referred to the liver transplant clinic. Matthew was diagnosed with the rare, chronic liver disease Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis. One of its symptoms is low bone density, which makes them break easily. "It was the universe in its weird way trying to send a message," Kylie tells AAP. "Otherwise, we really wouldn't have known he had this disease until his liver failed." After years of hospital visits, blood tests, colonoscopies and broken bones, 16-year-old Matthew was placed on the liver transplant waitlist in January. Social and sporty, he's frustrated he can't play rugby or go to the same parties as his mates but he's grateful for the chance at a healthy life. "You can't really explain in words how it feels as soon as you sign that paper," he says. "I stayed up that night, thinking was I going to get called but you slowly just learn to live with it." Ms Larman is emotional thinking about the operation he faces but knows her son is ready. "It's not just one thing he's had to deal with - it's the colonoscopies, the breaks, pins in his arms, plates and screws in his legs. "From age nine, he's had hospital experiences that would terrify any child. He's so brave." This DonateLife Week, Matthew is one of 1800 Australians on the organ transplant waitlist. Another 14,000 are on dialysis for kidney failure, hoping for a match. Yet while four in five Australians support donation, only one in three are registered. Families are far more likely to consent if they know their loved one's wishes. Matthew and Kylie want people to have the conversation and sign up. "You could change someone's life, change someone's family," she says. "One life could make a difference to seven people's lives." One life already has. Zac Bennett, 22, went for "a poke" on his motorbike and to pick blackberries near his family's property at Lewis Ponds, near Orange, NSW, six months ago. A kangaroo jumped out on a dirt track and he crashed. Zac was airlifted to Canberra Hospital but his injuries were catastrophic. Doctors told the family he wouldn't pull through. Through her heartbreak, Zac's mother Marion Bennett didn't hesitate. "I said: 'Righto, Zac's got all these perfect organs ... can he be an organ donor?'" she tells AAP. The medical staff were stunned and relieved they didn't need to ask. Zac wasn't registered but the family had talked about it. She knew it's what he would've wanted. "That was Zac's opinion: 'If I can't use it and somebody else can, why wouldn't you?'" Zac's organs helped several people: his heart, liver, kidneys and eyes were all donated. "Looking back, the fact that a little person who hadn't even reached one got part of his liver was phenomenal and he'd be super stoked with that," Ms Bennett says. "A young bloke around his age got his heart and I thought - he's going to hit the ground running because that heart went hard. "Zac could drink like a fish ... but he'd be sitting on my shoulder saying, 'see Mum, I told you my liver was fine' because he was a smartarse." Nothing will bring her "larrikin" of a son home. She misses his hugs and the way he lit up a room but she hopes others will make the same decision in similar moments. "He was a legend ... and other people can be a legend too." Country music artist Seleen McAlister also knows what it's like to wait. She spent years on the transplant list after end-stage kidney failure brought on by complications from type 1 diabetes. When she spoke to AAP last year, she was still waiting. Then this year, the call came. Mid-performance. She couldn't say anything right away. "I don't know how I did it. I don't remember much about it. I just remember looking out to the distance and catching Jason's eye and smiling at him," she says, referring to her husband. Ms McAlister had her transplant in June. Already she's writing more music and she and her family are making holiday plans and laughing more freely than they have in years. But she doesn't take a second of it for granted. "As they're taking out drains and giving me high fives and telling me I'm doing so great, I'm thinking in my head there's a family somewhere planning a funeral," she says. "We're celebrating and on the flip side of that, there's so much grief and sadness. It's not lost on me. "It stops me in my tracks ... call it cliché or whatever but all I want to do for the rest of my life is honour that person. "You have those quiet moments when I sit on the edge of the bed and I think: how did I get to be so lucky?"

Heartbreak to hope: Australians urged to donate organs
Heartbreak to hope: Australians urged to donate organs

Perth Now

timean hour ago

  • Perth Now

Heartbreak to hope: Australians urged to donate organs

Being pushed off a playground fort and breaking his arm at age nine - twice in one month - might just have saved Matthew Larman's life. The first time, abnormal liver readings had doctors worried he'd torn it but scans were clear and he went home in a cast. The second time, his mother Kylie Larman asked doctors to check the same readings again. They were still off. That prompted six months of investigation and eventually a biopsy. While on holiday, Ms Larman got the call: her son was being referred to the liver transplant clinic. Matthew was diagnosed with the rare, chronic liver disease Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis. One of its symptoms is low bone density, which makes them break easily. "It was the universe in its weird way trying to send a message," Kylie tells AAP. "Otherwise, we really wouldn't have known he had this disease until his liver failed." After years of hospital visits, blood tests, colonoscopies and broken bones, 16-year-old Matthew was placed on the liver transplant waitlist in January. Social and sporty, he's frustrated he can't play rugby or go to the same parties as his mates but he's grateful for the chance at a healthy life. "You can't really explain in words how it feels as soon as you sign that paper," he says. "I stayed up that night, thinking was I going to get called but you slowly just learn to live with it." Ms Larman is emotional thinking about the operation he faces but knows her son is ready. "It's not just one thing he's had to deal with - it's the colonoscopies, the breaks, pins in his arms, plates and screws in his legs. "From age nine, he's had hospital experiences that would terrify any child. He's so brave." This DonateLife Week, Matthew is one of 1800 Australians on the organ transplant waitlist. Another 14,000 are on dialysis for kidney failure, hoping for a match. Yet while four in five Australians support donation, only one in three are registered. Families are far more likely to consent if they know their loved one's wishes. Matthew and Kylie want people to have the conversation and sign up. "You could change someone's life, change someone's family," she says. "One life could make a difference to seven people's lives." One life already has. Zac Bennett, 22, went for "a poke" on his motorbike and to pick blackberries near his family's property at Lewis Ponds, near Orange, NSW, six months ago. A kangaroo jumped out on a dirt track and he crashed. Zac was airlifted to Canberra Hospital but his injuries were catastrophic. Doctors told the family he wouldn't pull through. Through her heartbreak, Zac's mother Marion Bennett didn't hesitate. "I said: 'Righto, Zac's got all these perfect organs ... can he be an organ donor?'" she tells AAP. The medical staff were stunned and relieved they didn't need to ask. Zac wasn't registered but the family had talked about it. She knew it's what he would've wanted. "That was Zac's opinion: 'If I can't use it and somebody else can, why wouldn't you?'" Zac's organs helped several people: his heart, liver, kidneys and eyes were all donated. "Looking back, the fact that a little person who hadn't even reached one got part of his liver was phenomenal and he'd be super stoked with that," Ms Bennett says. "A young bloke around his age got his heart and I thought - he's going to hit the ground running because that heart went hard. "Zac could drink like a fish ... but he'd be sitting on my shoulder saying, 'see Mum, I told you my liver was fine' because he was a smartarse." Nothing will bring her "larrikin" of a son home. She misses his hugs and the way he lit up a room but she hopes others will make the same decision in similar moments. "He was a legend ... and other people can be a legend too." Country music artist Seleen McAlister also knows what it's like to wait. She spent years on the transplant list after end-stage kidney failure brought on by complications from type 1 diabetes. When she spoke to AAP last year, she was still waiting. Then this year, the call came. Mid-performance. She couldn't say anything right away. "I don't know how I did it. I don't remember much about it. I just remember looking out to the distance and catching Jason's eye and smiling at him," she says, referring to her husband. Ms McAlister had her transplant in June. Already she's writing more music and she and her family are making holiday plans and laughing more freely than they have in years. But she doesn't take a second of it for granted. "As they're taking out drains and giving me high fives and telling me I'm doing so great, I'm thinking in my head there's a family somewhere planning a funeral," she says. "We're celebrating and on the flip side of that, there's so much grief and sadness. It's not lost on me. "It stops me in my tracks ... call it cliché or whatever but all I want to do for the rest of my life is honour that person. "You have those quiet moments when I sit on the edge of the bed and I think: how did I get to be so lucky?"

Greg was placed in an induced coma. The news he got on waking was a shock
Greg was placed in an induced coma. The news he got on waking was a shock

Sydney Morning Herald

time12 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Greg was placed in an induced coma. The news he got on waking was a shock

It was November 2024, and Greg Bird had just woken up from an induced coma in Royal Perth Hospital after 20 days when he was given some horrific news. While he had been unconscious, his family had been told he was unlikely to survive after multiple organ failure brought on by Type 2 diabetes. Bird had no idea he even had the disease. The 60-year-old said he had gone in pain to the chemist, who called an ambulance for him. He was rushed to Midland Hospital before being transferred to Royal Perth Hospital and placed in the coma. 'The diabetes had been sitting there and building up and building up, and it led to the point where the whole system shut down,' he said. 'They didn't think I was going to make it.' Bird is one of millions of Australians living with diabetes for whom healthcare costs are, on average, double that of someone without the condition – $9677 per person with diabetes annually compared to $4669. Those figures have come from new research released by researchers from Deakin, La Trobe and Curtin University, who found the total cost of diabetes to Australia's healthcare system was $14.2 billion in 2024.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store