Definition
Representation
Data Type | String |
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Format | NN |
Maximum character length | 2 |
Values
Value | Meaning | Start Date | End Date | |
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Permissible Values | 01 | Australian Health Care Agreements | ||
02 | Private health insurance | |||
03 | Self-funded | |||
04 | Worker's compensation | |||
05 | Motor vehicle third party personal claim | |||
06 | Other compensation (e.g. public liability, common law, medical negligence) | |||
07 | Department of Veterans' Affairs | |||
08 | Department of Defence | |||
09 | Correctional facility | |||
10 | Other hospital or public authority (contracted care) | |||
11 | Reciprocal health care agreements (with other countries) | |||
12 | Other | |||
13 | No charge raised | |||
Supplementary Values | 99 | Not known |
Comments
Guide for use:
CODE 01 Australian Health Care Agreements
Australian Health Care Agreements should be recorded as the funding source for Medicare eligible admitted patients who elect to be treated as public patients and Medicare eligible emergency department patients and Medicare eligible patients presenting at a public hospital outpatient department for whom there is not a third party arrangement.
Includes: Public admitted patients in private hospitals funded by state or territory health authorities (at the state or regional level).
Excludes: Inter-hospital contracted patients and overseas visitors who are covered by Reciprocal health care agreements and elect to be treated as public admitted patients.
CODE 02 Private health insurance
Excludes: overseas visitors for whom travel insurance is the major funding source.
CODE 03 Self-funded
This code includes funded by the patient, by the patient's family or friends, or by other benefactors.
CODE 10 Other hospital or public authority
Includes: Patients receiving treatment under contracted care arrangements (Inter-hospital contracted patient).
CODE 11 Reciprocal health care agreements (with other countries)
Australia has Reciprocal Health Care Agreements with the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Italy, Malta, Sweden, Finland, Norway, New Zealand and Ireland. The Agreements provide for free accommodation and treatment as public hospital services, but do not cover treatment as a private patient in any kind of hospital.
– The Agreements with Finland, Italy, Malta, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and the United Kingdom provide free care as a public patient in public hospitals, subsidised out-of-hospital medical treatment under Medicare, and subsidised medicines under the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme.
– The Agreements with New Zealand and Ireland provide free care as a public patient in public hospitals and subsidised medicines under the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, but do not cover out-of-hospital medical treatment.
– Visitors from Italy and Malta are covered for a period of six months from the date of arrival in Australia only.
Excludes: Overseas visitors who elect to be treated as private patients.
CODE 12 Other funding source
Includes: Overseas visitors for whom travel insurance is the major funding source.
CODE 13 No charge
Includes: Admitted patients who are Medicare ineligible and receive public hospital services free of charge at the discretion of the hospital or the state/territory. Also includes patients who receive private hospital services for whom no accommodation or facility charge is raised (for example, when the only charges are for medical services bulk-billed to Medicare), and patients for whom a charge is raised but is subsequently waived.
Excludes: Admitted public patients (Medicare eligible) whose funding source should be recorded as Australian Health Care Agreements or Reciprocal Health Care Agreements. Also excludes Medicare eligible non-admitted patients, presenting to a public hospital emergency department and Medicare eligible patients (for whom there is not a third party payment arrangement) presenting at a public hospital outpatient department, whose funding source should be recorded as Australian Health Care Agreements.
Also excludes patients presenting to an outpatient department who have chosen to be treated as a private patient and have been referred to a named medical specialist who is exercising a right of private practice. These patients are not considered to be patients of the hospital (see Guide for use).
References
Related content
Relation | Count |
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Data Elements implementing this Value Domain | 1 |