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Private patients in NSW public hospitals are blamed for longer waits, sparking calls for federal funding changes.
Private patients are exacerbating delays in New South Wales’ public healthcare system, according to the Australian Private Hospitals Association and Catholic Health Australia, which allege state governments allow private patients to access public hospitals, undermining need-based care.
NSW has the longest planned surgery waiting list—93,712 patients—and the highest share of private patients in public hospitals at 18.6%, more than double the national average.
The lobby claims this “queue jumping” forces public patients to wait longer and is driven by state revenue incentives, urging federal funding reforms to ban support for private patients in public hospitals and require hospitals to cover payment gaps.
NSW Health counters that 85.3% of public patients received surgery within recommended timeframes—better than any other state—and that wait times have dropped significantly, with care prioritized by clinical urgency, not insurance status.
The debate is central to negotiations over the next National Health Reform Agreement.
Los pacientes privados en los hospitales públicos de Nueva Gales del Sur son culpados por las esperas más largas, provocando llamados a cambios en la financiación federal.