Van Gool, Kees

Dr Kees Van Gool

Kees van Gool is a health economist and has extensive experience in international, national and regional health policy research. He is part of a leading team working on the financing and economics of primary care. Kees has previously contributed to and managed a variety of projects including work conducted for the Commonwealth Department of Health, MBF and the Australian Senate. He was a lead investigator in two independent reviews of the Extended Medicare Safety Net conducted for the Australian Government. He is currently a chief investigator at the Centre for Research Excellence on the Financing and Economics of Primary Care (REFinE), funded by the Australian Primary Health Care Institute (APHCRI) . He has worked extensively on cancer care, screening, cystic fibrosis and policy evaluation. He has quantitative skills in micro-economic modelling and has established a track record in using linked data. In 2011 he completed his PhD at the University of Technology Sydney, looking at the out-of-pocket costs faced by patients under Australia’s Medicare system. Kees has previously worked at the Department of Health, NSW Health and the OECD where he led a project on international health system performance and policy analysis on cardiovascular disease care and outcomes.

More from this expert

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On Friday, the national cabinet discussed recommendations from the newly released Strengthening Medicare report—only to announce that a decision on proposed reforms won't happen until it meets again in late April.

Many GPs think large, profit-driven corporates and hospitals are the main sources of Medicare misuse, Healthed survey finds.

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Some GPs do more than six hours of unpaid work in a week. We know from recent analysis that GPs contribute around 1.3 billion in unpaid work into the healthcare system each year.

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Healthed's survey team was struck by the dramatically lower rates of COVID among GPs.

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As NSW Health trials the expansion of pharmacists’ prescribing powers, Healthed asked GPs if doctors should be able to dispense medicines directly to their patients

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Despite many concerns, 16% of GPs support a trial and 26% are undecided

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GPs say patients’ mental health continues to deteriorate. Will cuts to psychologist visits make it worse or improve access?

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81% of GPs say the government made the wrong call, but only about half are convinced it was achieving its aims

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On Friday, the national cabinet discussed recommendations from the newly released Strengthening Medicare report—only to announce that a decision on proposed reforms won't happen until it meets again in late April.

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GPs share plastic surgeons concerns over lower standards for cosmetic surgery

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Three-quarters of GPs have patients with long COVID, according to a new Healthed survey with more than 1000 participants.

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Many GPs reluctant to give IV iron in second and third trimester, despite expert recommendations

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