❓ Hon Nick Goiran questions the WA government on funding for Voluntary Assisted Dying (VAD) and palliative care, following higher than expected VAD requests. The government provides budget allocations and states ongoing reviews for adequate funding.
AnsweredQoN 1163Legislative Council
QuestionView source ↗
I refer to page 37 of the Voluntary Assisted Dying Board Western Australia Annual Report 2021-22 that notes the
Voluntary Assisted Dying Board recommends that ‘adequate and ongoing funding
for the WA health system is provided to support the operation of the Voluntary
Assisted Dying Act 2019 .’ Page 38 states, the Board also notes that ‘[i]n 2021-22, a
greater number of voluntary assisted dying requests were received than
expected. This has had significant
impact on the demand for participating practitioners and statewide services', and I ask: (a) what was the Government’s budget allocation for
the provision of voluntary assisted dying in Western Australia in the reporting
period 2021-22; (b) what is the Government’s budget allocation for
the provision of voluntary assisted dying in Western Australia in the current
period 2022-23; (c) what would be considered to be ‘adequate’ annual
funding to meet the higher than expected demand for voluntary assisted dying in
Western Australia; (d) what was the Government’s budget allocation for
the provision of palliative care in Western Australia in the reporting period
2021-22; (e) 191 people accessed voluntary assisted dying in
the 2021-22 reporting period. How many
people accessed palliative care services in the same period; (f) what is the Government’s budget allocation for
the provision of palliative care in Western Australia in the current period
2022-23; and (g) what would be considered to be ‘adequate’ annual
funding to meet the unmet demand for palliative care in Western Australia identified
in the Parliamentary Joint Select Committee on End-of-Life Choices My Life,
My Choice Report (referred to on page 8 of the Voluntary Assisted Dying
Board Western Australia Annual Report 2021-22 ) and referenced in the JSCEOLC’s Recommendations
7 to 18 of that Report?
Voluntary Assisted Dying Board recommends that ‘adequate and ongoing funding
for the WA health system is provided to support the operation of the Voluntary
Assisted Dying Act 2019 .’ Page 38 states, the Board also notes that ‘[i]n 2021-22, a
greater number of voluntary assisted dying requests were received than
expected. This has had significant
impact on the demand for participating practitioners and statewide services', and I ask: (a) what was the Government’s budget allocation for
the provision of voluntary assisted dying in Western Australia in the reporting
period 2021-22; (b) what is the Government’s budget allocation for
the provision of voluntary assisted dying in Western Australia in the current
period 2022-23; (c) what would be considered to be ‘adequate’ annual
funding to meet the higher than expected demand for voluntary assisted dying in
Western Australia; (d) what was the Government’s budget allocation for
the provision of palliative care in Western Australia in the reporting period
2021-22; (e) 191 people accessed voluntary assisted dying in
the 2021-22 reporting period. How many
people accessed palliative care services in the same period; (f) what is the Government’s budget allocation for
the provision of palliative care in Western Australia in the current period
2022-23; and (g) what would be considered to be ‘adequate’ annual
funding to meet the unmet demand for palliative care in Western Australia identified
in the Parliamentary Joint Select Committee on End-of-Life Choices My Life,
My Choice Report (referred to on page 8 of the Voluntary Assisted Dying
Board Western Australia Annual Report 2021-22 ) and referenced in the JSCEOLC’s Recommendations
7 to 18 of that Report?
AnswerView source ↗
Answered
14 February 2023
Responded by
Leader of the House representing the Minister for Health
Response time
1 days
(a) $4,189,000
(b) $4,416,000
(c) WA Health is working with the VAD Board, state wide service providers and practitioners to ensure adequate funding and resources to provide high quality services and successful implementation of the Voluntary Assisted Dying Act 2019.
(d) $108,668,000
(e) 4,456 people accessed publicly funded inpatient palliative care services in the period 2021-22.
(f) $110,858,000
(g) WA Health continues to review areas of unmet need in order to appropriately fund palliative care service delivery in WA.
(b) $4,416,000
(c) WA Health is working with the VAD Board, state wide service providers and practitioners to ensure adequate funding and resources to provide high quality services and successful implementation of the Voluntary Assisted Dying Act 2019.
(d) $108,668,000
(e) 4,456 people accessed publicly funded inpatient palliative care services in the period 2021-22.
(f) $110,858,000
(g) WA Health continues to review areas of unmet need in order to appropriately fund palliative care service delivery in WA.
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