IHACPA Conference 2025

Adelaide Convention Centre, 5 – 7 August 2025

About the Independent Health and Aged Care Pricing Authority

The Independent Health and Aged Care Pricing Authority (IHACPA) is an independent government agency that assists the Australian Government to fund hospital and aged care services more efficiently by providing evidence based price determinations and pricing advice.

IHACPA delivers its annual program of work through consultation and collaboration with the Australian Government, state and territory governments, advisory committees, key stakeholders and the public. In 2022, IHACPA’s role expanded from public hospital pricing to include the provision of aged care pricing and costing advice to the Australian Government.

IHACPA’s key functions are to:

  • determine the annual national efficient price and national efficient cost for public hospital services to enable national activity based funding
  • develop national classifications for healthcare and other services delivered by public hospitals
  • provide pricing and costing advice to inform Australian Government funding decisions on residential aged care, residential respite aged care and in-home aged care
  • approve applications for refundable accommodation deposit above the maximum set by the Minister for Health and Aged Care.

More information

IHACPA's role is to determine the annual national efficient price and national efficient cost to enable activity based funding for public hospital services.

Activity based funding Activity based funding in the healthcare sector is a way of funding hospitals whereby they get paid for the number and mix of patients they treat. If a hospital treats more patients, it receives more funding. Because some patients are more complicated to treat than others, activity based funding also takes this into account.

National efficient price The national efficient price (NEP) is based on the average cost of a hospital admission across Australia. The NEP is a factor, along with the volume of services delivered, of the Australian Government’s funding contribution to public hospitals.

National efficient cost The national efficient cost (NEC) represents the average cost of government funding contributions for services that are not suitable for activity based funding, such as small rural and regional hospitals.

Sustainable growth in hospital costs The national weighted activity unit (NWAU) is a measure of health service activity expressed as a common unit, against which the NEP is paid for weighted units of services delivered.

IHACPA provides annual pricing and costing advice to government. While IHACPA’s role is to provide pricing advice to the Minister for Health and Aged Care, it is the government who determines the price for aged care services. IHACPA’s aged care pricing advice includes work across policy, pricing and costing, data collections, working groups and committees.

Pricing frameworks for Australian aged care services The annual pricing frameworks for Australian residential aged care services and Australian Support at Home aged care services underpin IHACPA’s approach to developing aged care pricing and costing advice to the government. The pricing frameworks are informed by annual public consultation.

Residential Aged Care Pricing Advice As part of its residential aged care work program, IHACPA provides government with pricing and costing advice on the Australian National Aged Care Classification for residential aged care and residential respite care.

Residential aged care pricing fees IHACPA is also responsible for assessing applications from approved providers of residential aged care services seeking approval to charge refundable accommodation deposit amounts that are above the maximum amount determined by the Minister for Health and Aged Care.

Past conferences

IHACPA Conference 2023

IHACPA Conference 2023 (previously named Activity Based Funding Conference) took place in Brisbane, Australia and virtually from 9 - 11 August 2023.

For the first time, the conference welcomed the aged care sector to the delegation.

The theme for the 2023 conference was The Future of Funding. Over three days, a scientific program including workshops and presentations across the health and aged care sectors explored the implementation, impact and opportunities for sustainable and efficient funding.

Activity Based Funding Conference 2022

Date: 5 – 6 May 2022

Location: Virtual

Theme: Innovation and collaboration: Activity based funding for sustainability in health care

Keynote speakers

  • Dr Amohia Boulton, Auckland University of Technology (New Zealand)
  • Mr Martin Campbell, National Health Service, England (UK)
  • Prof Paul Glasziou AO, Bond University (Australia)
Activity Based Funding Conference 2021

Date: 5 – 7 May 2021

Location: Virtual

Theme: Activity based funding into the future: Responsive. Relevant. Reliable.

Keynote speakers

  • Dr Ezekiel J. Emanuel, University of Pennsylvania (USA)
  • Dr Tobias Wirén, Capio Orthopaedics (Sweden)
  • Dr Sally Lewis, Swansea School of Medicine (UK)
  • Dr Louise Schaper, Australasian Institute of Digital Health (Australia)
Activity Based Funding Conference 2019

Date: 13 – 15 May 2019

Location: Melbourne, Victoria

Theme: Activity Based Funding: Cost, value and outcomes

Keynote speakers

  • Professor Christine Bennett AO, The University of Notre Dame (Australia)
  • Professor Andrew Street, The London School of Economics and Political Science (UK)
  • Dr Jason Sutherland, University of British Columbia (Canada)
Activity Based Funding Conference / 33rd Patient Classification Systems International Conference 2017

Date: 9 – 14 October 2017

Location: Sydney, New South Wales

Theme: Advancing value based health care

Keynote speakers

  • Dr Zeynep Or, Institute for Research and Information in Health Economics (France)
  • Professor James Harrison, World Health Organisation (Australia)
  • Professor Shinya Matsuda, University of Occupational and Environmental Health Hospital (Japan)
  • Mark Sonneborn, Minnesota Hospital Association (USA)
Activity Based Funding Conference 2016

Date: 9 – 11 May 2016

Location: Brisbane, Queensland

Theme: Future directions for Activity Based Funding

Keynote speakers

  • Stuart Guterman, Senior Scholar in Residence, AcademyHealth (USA)
  • Dr Frank Heimig, Managing Director, inEK GmbH (Germany)
  • Rob Anderson, Director, Activity Based Management Reform, WA Health (Australia)
  • Mark Cormack, Deputy Secretary, Strategic Policy and Innovation, Commonwealth Department of Health (Australia)
  • Dr Myles Cover, Technical Manager, Hospital Costing, Independent Hospital Pricing Authority (Australia)
  • Toni Cunningham, Senior Director, Purchasing and Funding, QLD Health (Australia)
Activity Based Funding Conference 2015

Date: 27 – 29 May 2015

Location: Adelaide, South Australia

Theme: Driving transparency and efficiency in Australian hospitals

Keynote speakers

  • Dr Diane Watson, Chief Executive Officer, National Health Performance Authority (Australia)
  • Prof. Keith Willett, Director, Acute Episodes of Care, National Health Service (UK)
  • Dr Sule Calikoglu, Deputy Director, Research and Methodology Health Services Cost and Review Commission (USA)
  • Jenny Browne, Chief Financial Officer, Northern Adelaide Local Health Network, SA Health (Australia)
  • Dr Robert Herkes, Clinical Director, Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care (Australia)
Activity Based Funding Conference 2014

Date: 23 – 25 June 2014

Location: Melbourne, Victoria

Theme: Implementing Activity Based Funding at the hospital level

Keynote speakers

  • Dr Michael Wilke, Managing Director, inspiring-health GmbH (Germany)
  • Shane Solomon, Chair, Independent Hospital Pricing Authority and Head, Health Business Unit, Telstra (Australia)
  • Dr Tony Sherbon, (former) Chief Executive Officer, Independent Hospital Pricing Authority (Australia)
  • James Downie, (then) Executive Director, Activity Based Funding, Independent Hospital Pricing Authority (Australia)