Australian hospitals are currently allocated funding on a fixed price for each treatment they provide. Proponents see this plan as making hospitals more efficient and providing an equal level of care. Opponents believe it causes hospitals to offer more expensive treatments in order to maximize their profits.
65% Yes |
35% No |
53% Yes |
24% No |
12% Yes, this helps keeps costs at a standardised rate nationwide |
11% No, this model encourages hospitals to use unnecessary expensive treatments on patients in order to make a profit |
See how support for each position on “Hospitals” has changed over time for 177k Australia voters.
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See how importance of “Hospitals” has changed over time for 177k Australia voters.
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Unique answers from Australia users whose views extended beyond the provided choices.
@9JKG8RG3mos3MO
Healthcare should not be free, as the government needs to fund other services and healthcare can be used as a way to develop the economy further.
@9BFYQ991yr1Y
No, Healthcare should be free
@934XZ332yrs2Y
Yes but put more barriers in so they don’t do unnecessary treatment for profit
@92ZPL5B2yrs2Y
Yes but regulate the services they provide and fees that are paid for each service
@92ZDPT62yrs2Y
medical care should be provided free of charge to those who unable to pay
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@ISIDEWITH3 days3D
Under orders from President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Ukraine’s forces are rushing to fortify their defence lines. They claim to be holding on but Russia is pounding them with devastating glide bombs, missiles and heavy artillery to try to punch its way through.Just 30km north-west of Avdiivka, Myrnohrad is in their crosshairs. So are the nearby frontline cities of Kostyantynivka, Kramatorsk, Pokrovsk and Slovyansk, all of which are coming under heavy and steady Russian attacks, leaving locals few options but to flee.Of Myrnohrad’s pre-war population of 47,000, only about half remain. The same is true of every other city and town in the region — more than 1mn people have fled since 2022, according to regional authorities.That trend is sure to continue as Russian forces outgun and outnumber Ukrainian soldiers who are struggling to hold the line.“Unfortunately, the enemy greatly outnumbers us,” said Yuriy Fedorenko, commander of the “Achilles” drone battalion. While he was speaking, live drone footage showed Russian forces on the move. “For every one of our artillery fires, the enemy fires five, six, sometimes seven shells,” he added.Russia’s presence was felt in the city, which counted 80,000 residents before 2022. Dozens of buildings and most recently the city’s train station have been destroyed by missiles.It is the second time that Kostyantynivka has been in the direct path of Russian troops, having been occupied for almost three months in 2014.A local petrol station advised customers and employees to spend as little time as possible on its site “in connection with the increased level of danger . . . associated with rocket and artillery fire”.In other cities close to the front, especially those serving as logistical hubs, residents have come under heavy bombardments since the start of the year. Many spend nights underground, in basements or bomb shelters.Besides the constant shelling, people suffer severe shortages of food and medicines. Visiting a doctor is difficult, as clinics and hospitals are packed with wounded soldiers. Nearly every resident interviewed by the FT mentioned the heavy psychological toll the war had taken on their communities.
@ISIDEWITH1wk1W
President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday that Russia had been obliged to launch strikes that have inflicted heavy damage on Ukrainian energy sites in response to Kyiv's attacks on Russian targets.The Kremlin leader, quoted by Russian news agencies, was speaking to his ally, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, after overnight attacks destroyed a large electricity plant near Kyiv and hit power facilities in several regions of Ukraine.The president said the strikes were part of the process of "demilitarisation" of Ukraine -- one of the objectives he cited when he sent Russian troops into Ukraine in February 2022."Unfortunately, we observed a series of strikes on our energy sites recently and were obliged to respond," Putin was quoted as saying."The strikes on energy are linked in part with solving one of the tasks we set for ourselves, and that is demilitarisation. We believe above all that in this way we will affect Ukraine's military industrial complex and in a very direct way."Russia, he said, had refrained from carrying out such attacks in winter "out of humanitarian considerations"."What I mean is that we didn't want to leave social institutions without power, hospitals and the like," he said. But he said the Ukrainian strikes -- mainly on oil refineries in many different Russian regions in recent weeks -- prompted Moscow to respond.In his comments to Lukashenko, Putin again dismissed any suggestion by Ukraine's Western allies that Russia had plans to attack any European countries beyond Ukraine.
@ObsessedRuffs4mos4MO
The declared goal of the Israeli onslaught has been the “eradication” of Hamas from the enclave, but the viability of that being achieved has been increasingly questioned by foreign officials and analysts. Instead, the large-scale destruction wrought on Gaza as well as internal communications point to another aim the Israeli authorities may be pursuing.A document produced by Israel’s Ministry of Intelligence leaked to the Israeli press in late October outlined the forcible and permanent transfer of Gaza’s 2.3 million Palestinian residents to Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula.The document was reportedly created for an organisation called The Unit for Settlement – Gaza Strip, which seeks to recolonise the Gaza Strip 18 years after Israeli troops and settlers withdrew from it.The new strategy is implemented by targeting civilian infrastructure that supports life in the strip, including schools, universities, hospitals, bakeries, shops, farmland and greenhouses, water stations, sewage systems, power stations, solar panels, and generators.This is carried out in parallel with a full siege on Gaza, whereby food, water, electricity and medicine have been cut off. The Israeli army lets in a few trucks a day, if at all, which humanitarian organisations have said does not meet at all the needs of the Palestinian population, 1.8 million of whom have been internally displaced.
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@ISIDEWITH7mos7MO
Joe Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) in August 2022, which allocated millions to combating climate change and other energy provisions while additionally establishing a $7,500 tax credit for electric vehicles. To qualify for the subsidy 40% of the critical minerals used in electric-vehicle…