Labor has pledged to reverse a cut made last year to bulk-billed psychiatry consultations, funded through Medicare.
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The government in December announced it would wind up subsidies for more than 120 telehealth services from January 1.
There were no changes made to consultations by telephone or attendances of up to 45 minutes with a practitioner known to a patient.
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There was particular concern held for Tasmanians living in regional parts of the state where there have been long-term issues in attracting mental health professionals to live in the community.
In a statement, the Labor Party said the cut had curtailed access to vital mental health services and had come about during the height of the Omicron wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.
It said the removal of bulk-billing had resulted in some psychiatrists withdrawing videoconferencing services to patients altogether.
The party said it would restore a 50-per-cent regional loading to telehealth psychiatric consultations.
It is estimated the measure would support 450,000 telehealth consultations over four years or 1.426 million consultations over 10 years.
The investment is expected to cost $31.3 million over the budget's forward estimates.
Labor leader Anthony Albanese said the government's cuts to telehealth services during the pandemic were unconscionable.
"Labor will restore these vital mental health services, making them affordable and accessible to people wherever they live," he said.
When the government's cuts to telehealth services were revealed last year, Burnie Health and Wellbeing Hub president Tim McCarthy said the changes reinforced the disparity in access to health services between urban and regional communities.
"There is a dearth of psychiatrists outside metropolitan areas," he said.
"Given the state of mental health services, I just can't believe that they're doing this."
The 50-per-cent fee loading for telehealth items was introduced a decade ago to encourage the uptake of video consultations by specialists to reach out to rural patients.