Isn't the PBS a seperate issue in this case? The PBS is about government subsidising of drugs but, as far as I know, it doesn't dictate which drugs are actually available (for those with the money) in Australia - that is really an issue to take up with the therapeutic goods administration (TGA). Treatment with with prescription only drugs that aren't on the PBS still takes place in Australia (e.g. the artificial antibody infliximab which is very useful for Crohn's and other inflammatory disease but is very expensive ~ $20,000/year or similar).Malfoy said:Also, while on the topic of healthcare, are you guys aware that because of the government trying to restrict the PBS, many better/newer psychiatric medications are unavailable to those of us who need them? For example, I can't get a particular type of anti-depressant, or mood stabiliser, or a few other things because they're not approved for that purpose and you need authority under Medicare to get them, despite the fact all the conventional treatments have severe side effects or don't work on me. So under your utilitarian paradise, should people have to suffer because the government restricts/regulates prescription drugs?
PBS still makes a lot of good quality drugs affordable for a lot of people. By acting as a sole monopoly buyer we can also negotiate better prices with the producing pharmaceutical companies. Utilitarians don't claim to be able to eliminate all suffering - any political position claiming to be able to do so is unrealistic. Rather, their aim is to minimise predictable suffering. We have limited resources devoted to health, sadly, and so they are rationed out on the basis of cost effectiveness. I personally feel that mental health often looses out because of underlying social biases and a lack of understanding, but that is a somewhat separate issue.
The PBS has holes - all healthcare systems do. People battle on with Crohn's, unable to afford infliximab and others like yourself have to make do with medications that aren't suited to their genetic/metabolic/psychological dispositions (fortunately personalised medicine approaches are becoming more prominent over time). While your criticism is still a reasonable one, you need a broader argument to make your case to the tune that 'society as a whole would be better off with alternative system X'. The data I mentioned above in relation to the US brings in to doubt the claim that libertarian approaches to healthcare will result in better health for the masses.
We need ideals to aim towards, but the fact that we fail to meet these ideals is not really reasonable grounds for criticism. No doctrine is likely to be able to live up to its ideals in full. Instead we need empirical comparisons of existing, or likely outcomes. Many countries have chosen to veer away from the US model when designing or updating their healthcare systems because of these very comparisons.