PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
16/06/1999
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
11333
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
16 June 1999 TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP NORTH SHORE PRIVATE HOSPITAL, SYDNEY

E&OE...................................................................................................

Well thank you very much Paul for those very warm words of welcome

and might I say extremely entertaining and enthusing speech. I acknowledge

my parliamentary colleagues, Kerry Chikarovski, Joe Hockey, Jillian

Skinner, Brendan Nelson, Andrew Humpherson and all the other distinguished

guests. Ladies and gentlemen I am very pleased to be here for a number

of reasons.

Firstly, but not only, I am delighted to be associated with a project

for which Paul Ramsey has been the basic inspiration. I have an immense

personal regard for Paul. He is a very dedicated enthusiastic, optimistic

Australian. The only limitation on this country's future prospects

is that we don't have eighteen and three quarter million people

who are simultaneously positive, talented, optimistic and hopeful

about the future and Paul is one of those blokes who always leaves

you a little more enthusiastic and a little more energetic and a little

more encouraged to do something positive and to do something good

after you have had a yarn to him. Whether it is in communications

or the private health field or whatever, he is always out there punching

very hard to make a positive contribution. After hearing some of his

tales of earlier years and what they did with those Jesuits I am glad

that I didn't go teach at Riverview.

But ladies and gentlemen the other of a number of reasons why I am

very pleased to be here today is that is an opportunity to say something

about a constant theme of mine in recent days and that is the concept

within our society of a social coalition. We all, I guess, want the

best for our country, we all want Australia to be a strong country,

we want it to be a fair country and we want it to be a decent society.

We all want there to be proper underpinnings so that the poor in our

community are well looked after, but we also want a society that encourages

people who have aspirations to do better, to work hard in the belief

that they get some return. I think we all agree on that whatever our

backgrounds are, whatever our politics are and whatever our views

are about public policy issues. I think we also recognise that there

is no one section of our society that can achieve those goals operating

on it's own.

There used to be a view in society probably 20 or 30 years ago that

you solved every problem by handing it over to the Government, particularly

the Federal Government, and that if you just got the Federal Government

to establish a program and pour a lot of money into it then that would

solve every difficulty. Then I think we went through a bit of a reaction

to that to a belief that the Government was hopeless at everything

and it had really no role in society at all except perhaps for providing

the wherewithal to defend the country and provide the Police and a

few basic services and that everything should be left to the private

sector.

Now, I think that we have realised that that doesn't quite work

either important though the private sector is, and dedicated though

all of us are to it. I think though what we have come to believe,

quite rightly in more recent years is that we all do have to work

together in a very co-operative way and that is why I talk frequently,

not only in areas like health and education and social security but

I talk very frequently in a lot of areas about the need to build this

social coalition, about the need for people to work together. The

Government does have a role, the private sector has a role, health

professionals, in the case of health policy have a role and of course

the great charitable religious and welfare organisations of our society

also have a very important role. What we really want to do is to find

the best combination, with each of those sectors of society contributing

those things that they can do best. In many ways our public health

and our private health system, collectively the Australian health

care system has the beginnings, I believe, of the very effective social

coalition.

It is fashionable unfortunately in this country and everybody is a

bit guilty of it, the politicians are guilty of it on occasion, the

media is guilty of it and other people in society are guilty of it,

of knocking the health care system of this country. I want to say

something very strongly in defence collectively of the health care

system. It may have its faults and it may need further reforms and

it may need further innovations but I don't believe there is

a better health system anywhere else in the world. Paul's joke

about the pilot not landing in Moscow is true and the reality is that

if you're a battler and you're earning $30 000 or $40 000

a year or the currency equivalent of that somewhere else in the world,

is if you're going to get ill get ill in Australia. Don't

get ill in the United States, don't get ill certainly in the

old Soviet Union, with great respect to the many people who have come

from the UK health system who maybe here today it is preferable to

get ill in Australia rather than the United Kingdom and overall I

think we do have a very good health system. That doesn't mean

to say it is perfect but it has a lot of things going for it. To start

with we have undoubtedly some of the best health care professionals

in the world, Australian doctors, Australian surgeons are world renowned,

we all know that. And the quality of care delivered by nursing professionals

in all Australian hospitals is of an exceptionally high standard.

We have always punched above our weight as far as medical research

is concerned. And I reminded myself of this when I had the opportunity

last Friday of opening the new gene therapy unit at the Peter McCallum

Institute in Melbourne of just how remarkably has been the impact

of the great names in medical research that have come out of this

country. When you think of the contribution of the all the institutes,

of the Walter and Eliza, of the Garvan and the list goes on, of the

Peter McCallum. And in the last budget I was very proud of the fact

that we committed ourselves to double – double - the amount of

money being given by the Federal Government to health and medical

research in this country. And we did that because we believe that

Australia is very good at that and we have very good researchers and

very good doctors and that is money well invested and well spent to

build a better future.

We do have very good health outcomes. And we also have a very good

partnership between the public system and the private system. And

you can't build a successful health care system anywhere in the

world without having the two of them. The Government has a role through

the public hospitals. And like so many Australians I've seen

the tremendous quality of work that is performed in public hospitals

in this country. And without that skill and care and dedication the

lives of many Australian families would be the poorer as a consequence.

But we've got to supplement that with the role of the private

hospital. And I think the role of the private hospital was heavily

discounted for a very long time. And I am pleased that we as a government

have done a lot more to encourage private hospitals. We've done

a lot more to encourage people back into private health insurance.

It's a hard battle getting people back into private health insurance

and you won't do it unless you give them incentives. You won't

do it unless you continue assiduously as many have done. And this

hospital is part of that process, of tackling the problem of gaps

in relation to private health insurance. And I make no apology for

the fact that we are investing $1.5 billion a year or more into encouraging

people, giving people an incentive, to remain in private health insurance.

Because it was always part of the Australia that I grew up in that

you had a strong public hospital system underpinned by private health

insurance which people were encouraged to enter and remain a member

of. And that provided a strong supplement of support for the private

hospital system because the one complements the other and there are

things that are done in private hospitals that can only be done within

the ambience of the private sector. And equally there's a broader

social responsibility which is discharged by both the public hospitals

working together with the private hospitals.

And I was glad that Paul made the point that the North Shore Public

Hospital and this hospital work together in a co-operative way. They

do not see each other as rivals. They see each other as co-contributors

to the State health system and that is enormously important. And that

same principle applies, of course, in other areas where you have both

private and public provisions such as education. They're not

rivals. They're co-contributors for the same overall system,

giving people maximum amount of choice and giving them the available

options that they ought to have in our kind of society.

So, ladies and gentlemen, I am really very pleased indeed to be here

today. I'm pleased to honour the philanthropic contribution of

Paul Ramsey to Australian society, to honour the contribution of his

hospital to new standards of excellence and care and comfort when

people are ill. It's certainly located in an easily accessible

part of Sydney. It's not far from Kirribilli, I don't object

to that. And it is a hospital that I know in the short time that it's

been open has already set new standards of comfort and excellence

and care and that is tremendously important. But most importantly

of all it is dedicated to the relief of human suffering, it is dedicated

to a caring approach to human life, it is dedicated to looking after

people when they need assistance and it is dedicated to the better

values and the better aspirations of the Australian community. So

in declaring this hospital formally open may I pay tribute to the

doctors and the nurses and all the other staff who work here. I've

always had an immense admiration for health care professionals in

this country. Their dedication and their skill and their compassion

is always deserving of our understanding and our respect. I thank

them. I thank Paul for his leadership and all the other members of

the board. And I have great pleasure in officially declaring the hospital

open.

[Ends]

11333