About 62 per cent disagreed or strongly disagreed that "in order to keep Medicare affordable, the government should further limit payments to GPs, even if this means patients have to pay more". Only 25 per cent of users agreed or strongly agreed with the statement. Medicare should not be left for GPs and patients to pick up more bills, voters say. Credit:Brendon Thorne The Australian Medical Association and the Royal Australasian College of General Practitioners say the extended freeze will place greater pressure on GPs, and could lead to many abandoning bulk-billing to charge patients a co-payment. Both groups are publicly campaigning against the extended freeze, with the College also running television and radio advertisements. It comes as Opposition leader Bill Shorten reignites his attack on the Coalition's intentions for the future of Medicare in the final fortnight of the election campaign. While a taskforce within the Department of Health was considering whether to modernise the system in the private sector, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has ruled this out.

Mr Shorten accused the government of misleading voters on its plans to privatise Medicare's payment system, with documents regarding the taskforce revealed as considered by cabinet under freedom of information laws. "If you want to defend Medicare, you've got to be a government who is prepared to properly fund the GPs, keep downward pressure on the price of medicine and ensure you keep bulk-billing incentives". Mr Turnbull denied that the government had been forced to back down for political reasons, saying it had the resources to do this within its Digital Transformation Office. He said Labor's claim the government wanted to privatise Medicare was "the most outrageous, bizarre almost, lie told in this whole campaign." Meanwhile, about 69 per cent of users also agree or strongly agree that "no extra payments for tests and screening should be passed on to patients using Medicare" .This compared to 17 per cent of users who disagreed or strongly disagreed with this statement. Most voters also said they did not think people with greater health care needs should have to bear more of the cost.

About 140,000 have participated in YourVote - which tries to determine users' political leanings from their convictions in different statements. Its results are weighted to ensure the sample reflects the Australian population. The Grattan Institute's health program director, Dr Stephen Duckett, said the results were unsurprising, given that the community has strongly supported both Medicare and bulk-billing since they were established, with GP bulk-billing rates currently up to 82 per cent. "That's not to say there is no money to be saved in Medicare, for example in pathology . . . but you've got to be doing it in a sophisticated way, not a crude way by putting in a freeze on rebates," Dr Duckett, former secretary of the department of health said. "The public is saying there's a constraint on what the government can do (to save costs) and I think they're reasonable constraints."