Vicky Purnell is a cancer survivor, and believes that without the Hobart Private Hospital, the outcome might have been different.

In 2016, Ms Purnell, from Devonport in Tasmania’s north-west, was diagnosed with uterine cancer.

Within four days, she had surgery at the Hobart Private.

It is one of Healthscope’s 37 private hospitals across Australia, which are under a cloud since the company’s owners went into receivership this week.

Exterior signage at Hobart Private Hospital.

Federally funded public health services deliver the bulk of critical health services, while the private system provides more than two-thirds of elective surgery. (ABC News: Maren Preuss)

The company has promised it is business as usual for the hospitals, but the uncertainty is causing concern for patients around the country.

Disastrous takeover sealed Healthscope’s demise

The Healthscope collapse has exposed the often-conflicting goals between government responsibility for health services and subsidised, but privately run, institutions looking to maximise profit.

In Tasmania, surgery for gynaecological cancer is only done at the Royal Hobart and Hobart Private hospitals.

Ms Purnell said she had the “full pull-out of everything” in a successful operation.

It was only during the surgery it became clear how fast-growing the cancer was.

“The fact that I was able to get timely surgery is why I’m here today,”

she said.

“I very quickly realised I had such swift surgery because I had private health insurance and I was able to go into the Hobart Private, as opposed to waiting for a space at the Royal.”

Vicki Purnell at her home in Devonport

Vicki Purnell says it’s an “anxious time” for patients linked to Healthscope. (ABC News: Mackenzie Heard)

Ms Purnell said a longer wait for surgery could have given her a different outcome.

She said she was concerned by Healthscope’s announcement and the impact it might have if it led to the closure of the Hobart Private and resulted in more surgeries going through the public system.

“You don’t have to be Einstein to work out that if you’re going to take those cases to the Royal [Hobart Hospital] there is going to be a wait.

“There’s only a finite amount of resources and a finite amount of operating theatre time.”

Ms Purnell said it was an anxious time for patients linked to Healthscope.

“We just don’t know what the long-term outcome will be.”

‘It gives me a lot of anxiety’Josie Mackey wears a dark green t-shirt and sits in a hospital bed

Josie Mackey says the public hospital system could not meet her needs. (Supplied)

Hobart-based patient Josie Mackey has used Healthscope hospitals in Tasmania and Victoria multiple times a year for the past decade for chronic health conditions and mental health.

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The 27-year-old said she was feeling “extremely concerned” about the company’s owners’ financial woes, especially after it closed its mental health hospital in Hobart in 2023.

“All of my specialists work out of Healthscope hospitals, and, as someone with complex chronic health conditions, it gives me a lot of anxiety,” Ms Mackey said.

“It puts into question future surgeries and procedures and as to where they’ll be performed out of. Will these specialists move interstate or elsewhere as they have nowhere to work out of?”

Ms Mackey does not believe the public system could meet her complex needs.

“My experiences with Healthscope hospitals has been overwhelmingly positive compared to other hospitals, from the nurses, doctors, staff, food services, to getting a fast admission date,” she said.

“To put it simply, the public health system could not meet my needs as someone with complex health issues and medical trauma.”

Ms Mackey will require ongoing procedures for endometriosis.

She said if she were a public patient, she could be waiting for more than a year for surgery, living with pain in the meantime, and unable to access other services.

Doctors and nurses in a surgical theatre operate on an unseen patient.

The Australian Medical Association says maintaining the balance between private and public care in Australia is essential. (Peakpx.com)

Darwin’s only private maternity service to closeThe hospital changing Australia’s healthcare system

I’ve seen the future of an important part of Australia’s healthcare system. 

Darwin mum Jess McClusky has private health insurance and is expecting a second child.

During her first pregnancy, she said it was comforting to have a private obstetrician caring for her, along with a five-day stay in the private hospital with access to specialists on the ward.

But from next week, Healthscope will no longer offer maternity services at the Darwin Private Hospital, leaving no private service.

Jess McClusky holds her baby

Jess McClusky says she had a positive experience at Darwin Private Hospital when she gave birth to her first child. (ABC News: Marcus Kennedy)

From August, it will also close maternity services in Hobart, leaving Tasmania with only one private operator.

Up in the Top End, it’s making Ms McClusky question whether it’s worth keeping her health insurance.

“It’s a waste of money … if you’re paying for insurance and you can’t get anything for it, what’s the point in having it?

“We’re going to continue it until we’ve had this baby and then we will reconsider our options.”

Like Josie Mackey, Jess McClusky has concerns about going through the public system.

“The public hospital that we’ve got here in Darwin is overcapacity, often,” she said.

“Are you going to go into labour [in a] hospital and can’t fit into a room, or they’re short-staffed?”

Jess McClusky sits on a picnic rug holding her baby, with toys and a plastic food container in the foreground

Jess McClusky is questioning whether it’s worth keeping her private health insurance. (ABC News: Marcus Kennedy)

Value of private insurance could be questioned, says AMA

Australian Medical Association president Dr Danielle McMullen said the balance between private and public care in Australia was essential.

“It’s what makes our healthcare system unique and is what leads to some of the world-leading outcomes we see in Australia.”

Dr Danielle McMullen sits at a wooden table, wearing a black suit and with a serious expression

Dr Danielle McMullen says people will be questioning whether their private health insurance is worth it if they cannot be treated. (Supplied)

Dr McMullen said almost 70 per cent of elective or planned surgeries were done in the private sector.

“That highlights just how critical our private hospitals are.”

She said Healthscope’s problems would be felt strongly in regional areas, where in some places it is the only private operator.

“This does raise the question in consumers as to what the value proposition is of their private health insurance,”

she said.Empty bed in a hospital ward.

The AMA says when a private hospital closes, often a community will lose much-needed doctors. (ABC News: Jake Grant)

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Depending where you live and how old you are, the proportion of GPs willing to bulk-bill can be much, much lower, write Elise Worthington and Alison Branley. 

Dr McMullen said change was needed to ensure private hospitals stayed viable.

“It’s really important that governments come together with insurers and private hospitals and groups like the AMA under a private health system authority to really drive the reforms we need to see.”

Dr McMullen said many doctors in regional areas worked between the public and private system to offer different services and expand their careers.

“We’ve seen examples across the country that when a private hospital closes, we lose much-needed doctors from the region.

“Many of these doctors use their private practices to help support the suitability of their practice in the public hospital as well.

“So when the private closes and their private rooms need to close around that, they are often forced to leave the region.”

‘Big, brave decisions’ called for over worsening wait times

This state was once among the best-performing jurisdictions for wait times of people in desperate need of emergency hospital treatment — but data shows that situation has worsened dramatically.

It’s something Vicki Purnell is worried about too, when it comes to surgeons in Tasmania.

“We are down to one gynaecological oncologist at the moment who is performing surgery at the Hobart Private and the Royal [Hobart Hospital],” she said.

Jess McClusky is also concerned about losing specialists in Darwin.

While she can still use a private obstetrician with her insurance, she’s worried the closure of the private maternity ward will mean they’ll shut up shop.

“We don’t know how long the private obstetricians will be here, one is retiring and the other is considering her options,” she said.

“We’re not sure if we will even have private obstetricians moving forward.”

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