Hospital Benefits Act 1945 (Cth)
HOSPITAL BENEFITS.
An Act relating to Hospital Benefits, and for other purposes.
[Assented to 11th October, 1945.]
BE it enacted by the King’s Most Excellent Majesty, the Senate, and the House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Australia, as follows:—
(2.) The amount to be paid to any such State for any financial year shall be such amount (if any) as the Minister determines.
(3.) An amount payable to a State under this section for any financial year shall be paid upon condition that an amount not less than the first-mentioned amount is used by that State, in that financial year, in such manner and subject to such conditions as the Minister approves, in or towards the payment of salaries to medical practitioners, and to professional persons of such other classes as the Minister approves, attending qualified persons in public wards in public hospitals.
(4.) In the last preceding sub-section, the expressions “qualified persons”, “public wards” and “public hospitals” have, in relation to any State, the same meanings as those expressions have in the agreement executed between the Commonwealth and that State under this Act.
THE SCHEDULE. Section. 3.
HOSPITAL BENEFITS: HEADS OF AGREEMENT.
The Schedule—
(
a )the amount ascertained by multiplying the Commonwealth Hospital Benefit Expenditure Rate for Public Wards by the number of daily occupied beds in public wards in that financial year; and(
b ) the amount by which donations (including voluntary contributions) received by public hospitals during that financial year and used for the maintenance of public hospitals is less than [here insert an amount determined by the Commonwealth and the State based on the average amount received by public hospitals during the financial years 1942–43and 1943–44by way of donations (including voluntary contributions )and used for the maintenance of public hospitals ].
(2.) The State shall not use the amount so set aside, or interest thereon, otherwise than for capital expenditure on public hospitals as approved by the Commonwealth.
(2.) The State may permit a public hospital to charge fees in respect of beds in a public ward which are temporarily used as non-public ward beds.
(2.) The State shall ensure that no increase in those charges is made without the concurrence of the Commonwealth and that any such increase made after the first day of September, 1945, and prior to the date of the agreement shall cease to be applied, as from the date of the agreement, unless the Commonwealth concurs in the increase.
(3.) The Commonwealth shall not refuse its concurrence under the last preceding sub-paragraph in respect of any increase of charges necessitated by increased costs.
(4.) The State shall ensure that, except with theconcurrence of the Commonwealth, no charge is made to qualified persons for services or comforts in public or non-public wards in public hospitals for which it was not customary to make a charge as at the first day of September, 1945.
The Schedule—
“the Commonwealth Hospital Benefit Rate for Public Wards” means Six shillings or such other rate as is, from time to tune, agreed upon between the Commonwealth and the State;
“the Commonwealth Hospital Benefit Rate for Non-public Wards” means Six shillings or such other rate as is, from time to time, agreed upon between the Commonwealth and the State;
“the Commonwealth Hospital Benefit Expenditure Rate for Public Wards” means [
here insert an amount determined by the Commonwealth and the State based on the average amount recovered during the financial years 1942–43and 1943–44from patients in public wards for each daily occupied bed ]or such other amount as is, from time to time, agreed upon between the Commonwealth and the State;“public hospital” means a hospital (not being a tuberculosis hospital within the meaning of the
Tuberculosis Act 1945) which—(
a ) is ordinarily recognized as a public hospital; and(
b ) is in receipt of a grant for maintenance from the State,and includes a State institution used for hospital purposes and a ward in any other institution maintained or subsidized by the State which is used for hospital purposes and is for the time being approved by the Commonwealth.
“public ward” means a ward which is ordinarily recognized as a public ward:
“non-public ward” means a ward other than a public ward;
“qualified person” means a person who was ordinarily resident in Australia at the time of admission to a public hospital and is occupying a bed for the purposes of hospital treatment, and includes, where two or more children are born at one birth, any child born at that birth in excess of one, and also any newly born child except during the time the mother of that child is occupying a bed, but does not include a member of the staff of a public hospital receiving treatment in his own quarters or a person whose fees are borne by the Commonwealth or who has received, or is entitled to receive, those fees under any law in force in the State; and
“daily occupied bed” means a bed occupied by a qualified person for a full day (the day of admission and the day of discharge together being counted as one day).
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