http://www.smh.com.au/national/heal...-just-helps-to-jump-queue-20140420-36yoj.html
Found this article an interesting read. I know for a fact that private hospitals have much shorter waiting lists because there is significantly less people going through the private system as opposed to the public system. People are using their own money to pay their way out of the public situation which I think is fair enough.
If you go public you will not have the same team of doctors. Consultants don't generally perform operations unless they are complex or think the reg is unable to do it. On the most part if you go through the public system you will be in contact with a generally less experienced doctor.
Another problem is consultants often share their time between private and public. They generally spend more time in private because that's where they make the most money. Hospitals should put in place restrictions for public consultants who also working privately, one to open more jobs for junior doctors who are stuck in the bottle neck training system and two decrease waiting times as they will be able to be in the hospital seeing patients instead of just relying on their regs who needs to consult them anyway.
The ineffectiveness of the public system astounds me as it took 3 hours to sort out a patient for an salphingectomy from an ectopic pregnancy after the reg consulted with 4 different doctors with waiting in between. Ridiculous, if you want to know where our money is going to this is one of the few places.
Found this article an interesting read. I know for a fact that private hospitals have much shorter waiting lists because there is significantly less people going through the private system as opposed to the public system. People are using their own money to pay their way out of the public situation which I think is fair enough.
If you go public you will not have the same team of doctors. Consultants don't generally perform operations unless they are complex or think the reg is unable to do it. On the most part if you go through the public system you will be in contact with a generally less experienced doctor.
Another problem is consultants often share their time between private and public. They generally spend more time in private because that's where they make the most money. Hospitals should put in place restrictions for public consultants who also working privately, one to open more jobs for junior doctors who are stuck in the bottle neck training system and two decrease waiting times as they will be able to be in the hospital seeing patients instead of just relying on their regs who needs to consult them anyway.
The ineffectiveness of the public system astounds me as it took 3 hours to sort out a patient for an salphingectomy from an ectopic pregnancy after the reg consulted with 4 different doctors with waiting in between. Ridiculous, if you want to know where our money is going to this is one of the few places.