4839.0.55.001 - Health Services: Patient Experiences in Australia, 2009
ARCHIVED ISSUE Released at 11:30 AM (CANBERRA TIME) 20/10/2011
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GIVEN THE CHOICE TO BE TREATED AS A PUBLIC OR PRIVATE PATIENT
Information to assist choice of being treated as public or private patient Of the people who were given the choice to be treated as a public or private patient, approximately 87% (783,400 people) reported feeling they had been given enough information to choose. Men were more likely than women to report this (92% and 85% respectively). Across the States and Territories, people living in WA (79%) were the least likely to report being given enough information to choose, while nearly all people living in the ACT (100%) and Tasmania (99%) felt they were given enough information, shown in Figure 4.4 below. 4.4 Felt was given enough information to choose to be treated as public or private patient (a), by State/Territory (See Table 4.3 for more detail) Less people in areas of least disadvantage reported receiving enough information to make a choice about being treated as a public or private patient than people in areas of more disadvantage (80% compared with, for example, 92% of people in the middle quintile of the index of disadvantage). While people with private health insurance had been given the choice to be treated as a public or private patient more often than people without private health insurance, they were less likely to feel they had been given enough information to make the choice (84% and 93% respectively). Employed people were less likely to feel that they had been given enough information to choose (83%) than people who were unemployed or not in the labour force (92%) (see Table 4.1 for more detail).
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