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HSAC FAQ - No. 3 |
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The Government has said throughout that "up to 17 cards will be replaced".
It isn't easy to find the list, but we've found it and extracted it below. We've then had to do the Government's work for it, by pointing to information about each scheme, and providing an analysis of the claim that a single card will help people.
The list includes cards issued by four agencies, in many cases multiple cards per agency. The Child Support Agency appears not to issue any cards at present. One of the agencies, DVA, is outside the DHS super-ministry.
No information has been located that identifies the number of people issued with each category of card. The only general (and hence very-large-volume) card appears to be the Medicare card.
There are 6 cards, across 4 distinct programs – Medicare itself, the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS), the Donor Registration Scheme and the (mysterious?) Cleft Palate Scheme:
There are 6 cards, also under several distinct programs:
There are 4 cards, under 3 programs:
Australian Hearing (1 card):
It appears that the Minister may be authorised to extend this list as he sees fit, subject to a limited 'disallowance' mechanism in Parliament.
Medicare cards 1 and 3 appear to be mutually exclusive.
Several pairs of Centrelink cards appear to be mututally exclusive.
DVA cards 1-3 appear to be mutually exclusive.
Morover, for a veteran, it appears that having a Medicare card ceases to be strictly necessary. At present, it appears that a veteran can choose to have treatment paid for under either scheme. (But will that arrangement survive the new single-card scheme?).
Furthermore, some Centrelink cards are mutually exclusive with some DVA cards.
In short, no-one has 17 cards now, and it would seem that most people have 1, a few have 2 or 3, and some, but only a very small percentage of people, have more than that.
As one commentator said, "We may finally have found the person who desires this card: they are the poor, fostered, widow/er of a veteran with hearing difficulties and/or a cleft palate, who is seeking a cheap train ticket to the Centrelink office and pharmacy after their doctor's appointment".
So there is very little 'wallet-bulge' or 'purse-clutter' to be saved, because:
Remarkably, the present proposal could actually represent a seriously retrograde step for pensioners who get concessions. Many of the concessions cease to be visually obvious, and instead every organisation that grants concessions is required to install a card-reader, and read every card that is presented!
This is analysis that the Government should have conducted, and published. But if it doesn't fit the Minister's agenda, it either isn't done, or is suppressed.
These are handled in the same way as the Medicare card. Practitioners collect card details on the first encounter with the patient and store them in their own systems. Veterans don't need to produce their cards once they have settled into a treatment pattern – which they almost all do.
The car/taxi benefit, where a veteran is entitled to free car transport to services, is organised by the treating professional and no card is required at any stage.
Sources of information on the Gold Card:
For the White and Orange Cards, use the hopelessly inconvenient mechanism at DVA Fact Sheets to access Fact Sheets HSV61 and HSV69.
If you are aware of errors or omissions in this document, please let us know.
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Created: 14 December 2006 - Last Amended: 9 January 2007 by Roger Clarke - Site Last Verified: 24 January 2005
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