In response to the 2019–20 bushfires, the Australian Government introduced a number of additional Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) subsidised mental health items in January 2020 for Australians whose mental health was adversely affected by a bushfire that occurred in the 2019–20 financial year (for details on these items, see Technical notes). The new services are provided by eligible psychologists, GPs and medical practitioners, social workers, and occupational therapists. Patients are not required to have a diagnosed mental health condition, GP mental health treatment plan, or referral before requesting these additional services.
Data used in this section refer to the MBS claims made during the week beginning 12 January 2020 to the week beginning 28 February 2021 (that is, to the end of the 2020–21 bushfire season). These data relate only to bushfire-specific mental health services that are claimed under a subset of mental health care MBS item numbers.
Use of the bushfire-specific mental health items increased rapidly in the weeks following their introduction. Nationally, the highest number of services claimed were between April and June 2020, averaging around 500–600 services per week (with a peak of about 620 services claimed in the week beginning 21 June 2020). By the end of February 2021, the use of the bushfire-specific mental health items had returned to around half to one-third of the level of service use seen in the middle of 2020, following the typical reduction in number of services around the Christmas/New Year period.
To explore national data and data for states and territories, see interactive data visualisations below (for data tables see Supplementary table S5).