Medicare报销、GP转介与心理健康治疗计划指南

如果您正在考虑开始心理治疗,您最先关心的问题之一可能就是其费用。好消息是,通过Medicare的Better Access计划,只要准备好相关文件,您在每个日历年都可以为心理咨询申请报销。

本指南将为您介绍:什么是转介与心理健康治疗计划,该如何获取它们,以及报销机制如何运作。

什么是心理健康治疗计划?

心理健康治疗计划(Mental Health Treatment Plan,MHTP)(此前称为心理健康照顾计划Mental Health Care Plan)是由您的GP与您共同制定的一份书面计划。该计划记录了您经评估患有需要治疗的心理健康问题,并为您转介心理健康专业人员进行规定次数的治疗。

来自GP的MHTP和转介,是获得Medicare报销的关键。没有这些文件,您仍可自费就诊心理师,但将无法获得报销。该计划归您所有,您可以持此计划前往任何符合资格的执业者处就诊。Medicare报销适用于注册心理师、临床心理师及经认证的心理健康社工。

哪些人符合资格

要符合Better Access计划下的Medicare报销条件,您需要:

  • 持有有效的Medicare卡。
  • 由您的GP(或在某些情况下由精神科医生或儿科医生)评估您的心理健康状况,并确认是否符合Medicare标准。
  • 已制定一份心理健康治疗计划。

所涵盖的疾病范围广泛,包括抑郁、焦虑、创伤后应激障碍、适应困难、进食障碍以及惊恐障碍等。在看GP之前,您不需要已有正式诊断;这正是就诊的目的之一。

如何获取MHTP

预约GP告诉诊所您希望讨论心理健康问题,并咨询心理健康治疗计划的相关事宜。大多数诊所会为您安排30至45分钟的就诊时间。如果您没有固定GP,也可以通过在线GP服务进行咨询,包括提供全额报销的GP。 

进行沟通。您的GP会询问您的近期感受、持续时间以及这些状况如何影响您的生活。他们也可能会使用简短问卷来评估您的情况。

获取计划和转介。如果GP为您制定了MHTP并提供心理师转介,他们会准备相关文件并将您转介至心理健康专业人员。您可以指定特定的治疗师或诊所(包括Equana Minds),GP不会代您选择。

预约咨询。与您所选择的Equana Minds心理师或社工预约咨询,并将您的MHTP及转介上传至平台。咨询结束后,Equana Minds将代您提交Medicare报销申请。

咨询次数与报销

在Better Access计划下,符合条件的患者每个日历年最多可报销10次个人心理咨询

通常,该计划会先转介最多6次咨询。之后,GP会对进展进行评估,并可转介剩余的咨询次数。咨询可采用面对面或远程医疗形式,报销比例相同,因此Equana Minds等平台能够完全在线提供符合Medicare报销标准的心理治疗服务。

未使用的咨询次数不会结转。每年1月1日,您的咨询次数将重置。

当前报销金额(2026年)

以下是截至2026年的每次咨询的标准Medicare报销金额:

服务提供者类型Medicare报销金额
临床心理师$145.25
注册心理师$98.97
认证心理健康社工$87.24

报销金额是指Medicare的退款金额。差额用是咨询费用与报销金额之间的差额。例如,如果一位临床心理师的收费为$270,而Medicare报销$145.25,则您需要支付$124.75。

部分咨询师提供全额报销,即收费与报销金额相同,您无需自掏腰包支付任何费用。

Medicare报销哪些专业人员的费用?

Better Access计划可报销:临床心理师(clinical psychologists)、注册心理师(registered psychologists)、认证心理健康社工(AMHSW)、具心理健康资质的职业治疗师(occupational therapist)、提供针对性心理干预策略的GP,以及精神科医生(psychiatrist)(通过不同的Medicare路径)。

不可报销:咨询师(counsellor)和心理治疗师(psychotherapist)。尽管他们可能资质卓越且非常适合您的需求,但目前Medicare在Better Access计划下不对其服务进行报销。部分私人医疗保险的附加项目可能提供相关保障。

如果您必须依靠 Medicare 报销才能负担得起心理治疗费用,您应选择心理师、临床心理师或认证心理健康社工。

复查与转介续期

在完成初始咨询阶段后,您的GP会对您进行复查,以评估治疗进展,通常是在您完成六次治疗后。评估后,您的GP可为您转诊日历年内剩余的四次治疗。

您不需要每年完全制定一个新的MHTP,但需要再次就诊GP为转介续期,才能为新疗程申请报销。

私人医疗保险

许多包含附加项目(extras)的私人医疗保险会涵盖心理治疗、咨询或社会工作服务。需要注意:

  • 同一次咨询不能同时申请Medicare和私人医疗保险报销。
  • 私人医疗保险可能覆盖Medicare不涵盖的专业人员,包括咨询师和心理治疗师。
  • 有些人会在前10次疗程中使用Medicare,在同一年后期转为使用私人医疗保险。

不同保险公司的承保范围各不相同。请联系您的保险公司以确认具体承保内容。

常见问题

在看GP之前需要诊断吗?不需要,GP会在就诊时对您进行评估。

可以通过远程医疗获取MHTP吗?可以,在多数情况下适用。

如果我对当前GP感到不适怎么办?任何GP都可以为您制定MHTP。如果您希望与一位语言或文化背景与您相近的专业人士讨论心理健康问题,您可以预约该专业人士。

可以在治疗过程中更换治疗师吗?可以,如感到不合适,可请GP调整转介。

我的雇主或其他人会知道吗?不会,Medicare记录是保密的。

如果我希望使用其他语言进行咨询怎么办?您可以选择会说您语言的治疗师。与语言和文化背景相近的专业人员沟通,能让您更自在地表达自己的感受。

Equana Minds如何使用Medicare

Equana Minds是一家澳大利亚远程医疗机构,提供心理师、临床心理师、认证心理健康社工、咨询师及心理治疗师服务,支持多种语言及文化背景。

如果您拥有心理健康治疗计划,即可凭此计划向我们申请 Medicare 报销,用于支付与心理师、临床心理师或认证心理健康社工进行的咨询费用。咨询通过安全的远程医疗平台进行,让您可以在澳大利亚任何地方获得符合您文化和语言背景的服务。

我们的接诊流程非常简单:您只需告知您的需求,我们为您匹配咨询师,并在首次咨询前上传您的MHTP及转介。我们会代您提交Medicare报销申请,退款将直接存入您的银行账户。

关于咨询费用,请参阅我们的“价格与退款”(Pricing and Rebates)页面。如果您已准备好开始,请浏览“浏览治疗师”(Browse Therapists)或“匹配治疗师”(Get Matched)页面,找到最适合您的治疗师。

本文为关于Medicare Better Access计划的一般性信息(截至2026年)。报销金额及资格标准由澳大利亚政府制定,并可能发生变化。如需最新官方信息,请访问Services Australia(servicesaustralia.gov.au) 或Medicare Mental Health (medicarementalhealth.gov.au)网站本文不构成医疗建议。有关您的个人情况,请咨询GP。

Why therapy feels different in your native language

You might speak fluent English. You might work, study, and build your whole life in it. But when it comes to talking about how you feel, something can still feel slightly out of reach.

Have you ever reached for a word in English and felt it land slightly wrong? Too flat, too clinical, not quite what you meant?

Have you ever found yourself describing something painful as “fine” or “okay”, not because it was, but because the right word didn’t seem to exist in that language?

Have you ever left a conversation feeling like you only said half of what you actually meant?

If any of that resonates, you’re far from alone. And there’s a reason for it.

Australia speaks more than one language

Australia is one of the most linguistically diverse countries in the world. According to the most recent Census, nearly 1 in 4 Australians speaks a language other than English at home, and that number is growing.

The most common languages spoken at home beyond English include Mandarin, Arabic, Vietnamese, Cantonese, Punjabi, Greek, and Italian. For a growing number of people, English is a second or even third language, used comfortably every day, but not always the language of the inner world.

The difference between understanding and feeling

Language isn’t just about words. It’s about meaning, nuance, and the way we’ve learned to express emotion over a lifetime.

For many people, their first language is where emotions were first named, relationships were first formed, and difficult experiences were first understood. It’s the language that lives closest to the self.

Even for people who are highly proficient in a second language, expressing something deeply personal can feel flatter, or harder to access. You may know the right words. But they don’t always feel like the right words.

Research into bilingualism and emotional processing helps explain why. Studies often find that emotional words learned in childhood carry more weight than the same words learned later in life, sometimes referred to as the “foreign language effect.” Autobiographical memories, in particular, are often more accessible in the language in which they were originally formed.

Why this matters in therapy

Therapy is built on communication. Not just what you say, but how you say it, tone, texture, cultural meaning.

When you can speak in your native language, something often shifts. It becomes easier to describe complex emotions, to say what you actually mean without mentally translating first, and to speak more naturally and openly. For many people, it also creates a sense of ease and familiarity that makes it easier to show up fully in the process.

The effort of translating thoughts into a second language can itself create emotional distance, the opposite of what therapy needs to work.

When there’s a mismatch between a client’s preferred language and the language used in therapy, it can affect the depth of disclosure and the quality of the therapeutic relationship, both of which matter to how care unfolds.

It’s not just language, it’s culture

Language and culture are deeply intertwined.

Two people can speak the same language and still come from very different worlds. And often, it’s the unspoken things, the cultural context beneath the words, that shape how we experience stress, family, relationships, and identity.

For some people, this shows up as a clear preference for one language over another. For others, particularly people who grew up bilingual in Australia, it’s more layered. Your heritage language might carry family and childhood, while English carries work and adult life. Both feel like home, in different ways. Therapy that recognises this can hold space for the whole picture, not just one half of it.

Feeling understood in therapy can go beyond vocabulary. It can mean working with someone who shares your cultural references, understands the weight of family expectations, or recognises the values and dynamics that shaped how you grew up. That kind of recognition can be quietly significant.

The gap, and why it’s starting to close

Despite Australia’s extraordinary cultural diversity, research consistently shows that people from culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) backgrounds face significant barriers to accessing mental health support.

A comprehensive scoping review of Australian research found that stigma, language barriers, limited mental health literacy, cultural misunderstandings, and difficulty navigating the health system are among the most persistent obstacles. Many people miss out on care simply because information isn’t available in their language, or because no culturally appropriate service exists nearby.

This isn’t a reflection of need. It’s a reflection of access.

The consequences are real: people from CALD backgrounds have lower rates of voluntary mental health care compared with the general population, and are more likely to only access support when things have escalated. Many are waiting too long, or not getting help at all. Not because the need isn’t there, but because the system hasn’t met them where they are.

But that’s changing. The growth of online therapy has been quietly significant for communities where language-matched care was previously hard to find, particularly for people in regional areas, or in language communities too small to have a local specialist. Being able to connect with a therapist who speaks your language, via a video call, from wherever you are, removes a barrier that simply didn’t used to have a solution.

If you’ve ever felt this way

You’re not alone if you’ve ever struggled to explain something personal in English, felt like your words didn’t quite capture what you meant, or held back simply because it felt too hard to express.

These experiences are more common than people often realise, and they’re worth taking seriously.

A different kind of starting point

Being able to speak in your preferred language, with someone who understands your background, won’t change everything overnight. But it can change how easy it feels to begin.

And sometimes, that’s the part that matters most.

If you’d like to speak with a therapist who understands your language and cultural background, you can explore our therapists or get matched with someone who may be a good fit for you.

Medicare Rebates, GP Referrals and Mental Health Treatment Plans: A Guide.

If you’ve been thinking about starting therapy, cost is probably one of the first things on your mind. The good news is that, through Medicare’s Better Access initiative, you can claim rebates on psychology sessions every calendar year, once you have the right paperwork in place.

This guide covers what referrals and Mental Health Treatment Plans are, how to get one, and how the rebates work.

What is a Mental Health Treatment Plan?

A Mental Health Treatment Plan (MHTP) (previously called a Mental Health Care Plan) is a written plan developed by your GP with you. It records that you’ve been assessed as having a mental health condition that requires treatment, and refers you to a mental health professional for a set number of sessions.

The MHTP and the referral from the GP, are the key that unlocks Medicare rebates. Without these, you can still see a psychologist privately, but you won’t be eligible for the rebates. The plan is yours, and you can take it to any eligible practitioner. The Medicare rebates are available with registered psychologists, clinical psychologists and accredited mental health social workers.

Who is eligible

To qualify for Medicare rebates under Better Access, you need:

  • A valid Medicare card.
  • An assessment by your GP (or in some cases a psychiatrist or paediatrician) of your mental health concerns, and whether they meet Medicare criteria.
  • A Mental Health Treatment Plan in place.

Conditions covered are broad, including depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress, adjustment difficulties, eating disorders, and panic disorders. You don’t need a diagnosis before seeing your GP; that’s part of what the appointment is for.

How to get an MHTP

Book an appointment with your GP. Tell your GP practice you’d like to discuss your mental health and ask about a Mental Health Treatment Plan. Most practices will book a 30 to 45 minute slot. If you don’t have a regular GP, you can also access online GPs, including for bulk billed appointments. 

Have the conversation. Your GP will ask how you’ve been feeling, for how long, and how it’s affecting your life. They may use a short questionnaire to assess how you are doing.

Receive the plan and referral. If your GP provides a MHTP and psychologist referral, they prepare the document and refer you to a mental health professional. You can ask for a specific clinician or practice, including Equana Minds. Your GP doesn’t choose for you.

Book your therapy sessions. Book your session with your chosen Equana Minds psychologist or social worker, then upload your MHTP and referral to the portal. After your session, Equana Minds will handle the Medicare claim on your behalf.

Sessions and rebates

Under Better Access, eligible patients can claim a Medicare rebate for up to 10 individual therapy sessions per calendar year.

The plan typically refers you for an initial block of up to 6 sessions. After that, your GP reviews how things are going and can refer you for the remaining sessions. Sessions can be in person or via telehealth at the same rebate rate, which is why platforms like Equana Minds can deliver Medicare-rebated therapy entirely online.

Unused sessions don’t roll over. On 1 January each year, your session count resets.

Current rebate amounts (2026)

These are the standard Medicare rebates per individual session, current as of 2026:

Provider typeMedicare rebate
Clinical Psychologist$145.25
Registered Psychologist$98.97
Accredited Mental Health Social Worker$87.24

The rebate is what Medicare pays back. The gap fee is the difference between what the clinician charges and the rebate. For example, if the fee for a clinical psychologist is $270 and Medicare rebates $145.25, your gap fee is $124.75.

Some clinicians bulk bill, which means they charge exactly the rebate amount and you pay nothing out of pocket.

Which clinicians does Medicare cover?

Covered under Better Access: Clinical psychologists, registered psychologists, Accredited Mental Health Social Workers (AMHSW), occupational therapists with mental health endorsement, GPs providing focused psychological strategies, and psychiatrists (under separate Medicare pathways).

Not covered: Counsellors and psychotherapists. They can be highly qualified and an excellent fit, but Medicare doesn’t currently rebate their services under Better Access. Some private health insurance extras policies do cover them.

If Medicare rebates are essential to making therapy affordable for you, you’ll want to see a psychologist, clinical psychologist, or accredited mental health social worker.

Reviews and renewals

After your initial block of sessions, your GP conducts a review to see how therapy is going, usually after six sessions. Following the review, your GP can refer you for the remaining four sessions in the calendar year.

You don’t need an entirely new MHTP each year, but you do need to see your GP for a referral renewal to access rebates for new sessions.

Private health insurance

Many private health insurance policies with extras cover include a benefit for psychology, counselling, or social work sessions. A few things to know:

  • You can’t claim both Medicare and private health insurance for the same session.
  • Private health insurance can cover clinicians Medicare won’t, including counsellors and psychotherapists.
  • Some people use Medicare for their first 10 sessions, then switch to private health insurance later in the year.

Coverage varies between funds. Contact your insurer to confirm what’s covered.

Common questions

Do I need a diagnosis before seeing my GP? No. The GP will assess you during the appointment.

Can I get an MHTP via telehealth? Yes, in many cases.

What if I don’t feel comfortable with my GP? Your MHTP can be created by any GP. If you’d prefer to discuss your mental health with someone who shares your language or cultural background, you can book with them.

Can I change therapists partway through my plan? Yes. If the fit isn’t right, ask your GP to redirect your referral.

Will my employer or anyone else find out? No. Medicare records are private.

What if I’d prefer to do therapy in another language? You can choose a clinician who speaks your preferred language. Working with someone who shares your language and cultural background can make a real difference to how comfortably you can express what you’re going through.

How Equana Minds works with Medicare

Equana Minds is an Australian telehealth practice offering therapy with psychologists, clinical psychologists, accredited mental health social workers, counsellors, and psychotherapists, across multiple languages and cultural backgrounds.

If you have a Mental Health Treatment Plan, you can use it with us to access Medicare rebates for sessions with our psychologists, clinical psychologists, or accredited mental health social workers. Sessions are conducted via secure telehealth, so you can access culturally and linguistically matched care from anywhere in Australia.

Our intake is straightforward: you tell us what you’re looking for, we match you with a clinician, and you upload your MHTP referral for your first session. We handle the Medicare claim on your behalf, and the rebate is deposited directly into your bank account.

For session fees, see our Pricing and Rebates pages. If you’re ready to get started, explore our Browse Therapists or Get Matched pages to find the right therapist for you.

This article is general information about Medicare’s Better Access initiative and is current as of 2026. Rebate amounts and eligibility criteria are set by the Australian Government and may change. For the most up-to-date official information, visit Services Australia (servicesaustralia.gov.au) or Medicare Mental Health (medicarementalhealth.gov.au). This article isn’t medical advice. Please speak with your GP about your individual circumstances.

If you are in crisis or immediate danger, please call 000 in Australia. For 24/7 crisis support, call Lifeline on 13 11 14.

If you are located overseas, please use these crisis contact resources for assistance.