This appeared today.
Commonwealth agencies to be cut by Abbott Government
- Steve Lewis
- News Limited Network
- September 22, 2013
AGENCIES responsible for tackling obesity, capital city planning and security advice on asylum seekers are to be slashed as Tony Abbott takes the axe to Labor's reform agenda.
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The Coalition will also begin unwinding key "nanny state'' agencies such as the Australian National Preventative Health Agency, established to lead the national fight against obesity, alcohol abuse and tobacco use.
Health Minister Peter Dutton has been critical of ANPHA's decision to spend $500,000 on a study into a potential "fat tax" despite neither side of politics supporting such a move.
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Two major health agencies - the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare and the year-old National Health Performance Authority - are under review and could have their combined budgets - of around $40 million a year - slashed.
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Scrapping ANPHA will leave the Government open to criticism that it's not taking seriously a raft of key health challenges - including the growing obesity challenge and tobacco and alcohol control.
But Mr Dutton is determined to slash hundreds of millions of dollars in bureaucratic expenses and is reviewing the ongoing role of the AIHW - which provides a national service on health and welfare statistics.
The National Health Performance Authority - established in 2011 to provide uniform statistics on the performance of hospitals and other health facilities - could also be absorbed back into the health department.
Full article is here - I have extracted Health related bits and left the rest out.
If this is the quality of what we are going to see from Mr Dutton and his team I am very worried. Evidence based health policy is only possible when you have an organisation like the AIHW crunching the statistics. Continued support of Preventative Care is really a no-brainer and you can be sure that without the ANPHA improvement of hospital performance and costs will be that much harder.
Compared with the billions spent in the health system these cuts are just the wrong target in my view. Now the PCEHR might be a better item to consider - or is that already coming?
David.
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