Overall public hospital performance worse than 10 years ago, report suggests
The Australian Medical Association (AMA) has released its 2026 Public Hospital Report Card, and while it does show modest improvements in some areas, including an increase in the total number of public hospital beds and a small reduction in the median wait time for planned surgery, AMA said that “overall performance remains significantly worse than it was 10 years ago”.
AMA said that the report reflected the impact of growing demand, with AMA President Dr Danielle McMullen saying that while the report identified some modest improvements, patients are still waiting too long for care and the gap between demand and capacity continues to grow.
EDs remain under intense pressure nationwide, AMA said, with the proportion of patients completing their ED visit within four hours having fallen again to the lowest level on record, with just over half of patients now meeting the nationally agreed benchmark.
“Patients triaged as urgent include people with fractures, severe abdominal pain and severe injuries, and nearly one-third of these patients are still not being seen on time, which is unacceptable,” McMullen said. “Planned surgery performance remains deeply concerning. While median waiting times have fallen slightly for the second year in a row, Australians are still waiting far longer for surgery than they were a decade ago.
“The proportion of Category 2 patients treated within clinically recommended timeframes remains well below historical levels, and patients who miss those timeframes often wait months longer than advised. These are medically necessary procedures that prevent deterioration and improve quality of life.”
AMA said a persistent capacity shortfall is at the heart of declining performance, noting that although more beds have been added in recent years, population growth has offset these gains. “Bed availability per person has stagnated, and capacity for older Australians has fallen to the lowest level ever recorded, despite people aged 65 and over accounting for nearly half of all public hospital patient days,” AMA said.
McMullen also said that the report confirmed the system remains stretched beyond its limits, with it unclear whether additional federal government funding in the new National Health Reform Agreement (NHRA) would be enough to reverse the decline in performance.
McMullen said it was vital the additional funding announced in January be used by states and territories to lift capacity and address exit block. She added that without further reforms it may not be enough to turn things around, and that more detail was needed on how the new agreement would achieve reform and reverse declining performance.
“After years of campaigning through our Clear the Hospital Logjam campaign the federal government announced an additional $25 billion in funding for the new agreement and that is, of course, very welcome,” McMullen said. “But our costings suggest it may not be enough to get our public hospitals out of the cycle of crisis they’ve been in.
“AMA modelling showed that at least $34bn was the type of investment required, with substantial additional investment needed from the states and territories, who oversee the day-to-day running of our public hospital system.”
Sexual harassment between doctors — workplace interventions to prevent and minimise harms
Published in February, an Australian National University and University of Glasgow co-edited...
Almost half of Queensland Health doctors meet risk of burnout — survey says
Results are in from the Queensland Health Medical Workforce Wellbeing Survey to which more than...
WA healthcare professionals gain workplace-specific courses
St John WA has expanded its training offering for healthcare professionals, including new courses...
