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John Deeble
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    John Deeble

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    John Stewart Deeble

    Born 9 July 1931
    Donald, Victoria, Australia
    Died (aged 87)
    Canberra
    Nationality Australian
    Education Bachelor of Commerce, Melbourne University;
    Diploma of Hospital Administration, University of New South Wales
    Occupation Health economist
    Years active 1965-2015
    Employer Australian National University
    Known for Architect of Medicare Australia
    Board member of Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association
    Australian Health Insurance Commission
    Australian Institute of Health and Welfare
    Spouse Mary Beers Deeble
    Awards Officer of the Order of Australia

    John Stewart Deeble AO (9 July 1931 – 5 October 2018) was an Australian academic, health economist and the architect of Medicare in Australia.

    Early life

    A native of Wimmera, Deeble grew up near Donald, Victoria, and left school aged 15. His first job was a clerical position at the Peter McCallum Institute in Melbourne. While working he completed a Commerce Degree at Melbourne University and a Diploma of Hospital Administration at the University of New South Wales.

    Career

    In 1965 he started a research position at the Institute of Applied Economic Research at the University of Melbourne. While working there, Deeble and Richard Scotton coauthored proposals for what became known as Medicare. He was Special Adviser to the ministers for health in the Whitlam and Hawke governments, chairman of the planning committees for both Medibank and Medicare and a commissioner of the Health Insurance Commission for 16 years. He was Patron of the Deeble Institute for Health Policy Research, the research arm of the Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association.

    In 1996, in recognition of his service to community health in the fields of health economics and health insurance policy development, he was awarded the Order of Australia.

    He also served as First Assistant Secretary in the Commonwealth Department of Health, Founding Director of the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, and from 1989 to 2005, Adjunct Professor of Economics at the National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health at the Australian National University. He was also a World Bank consultant on healthcare financing in Hungary, Turkey and Indonesia, and from 1995 to 2005, an adviser to the government of South Africa.

    He died in Canberra on 5 October 2018, aged 87. His funeral was held in Canberra on 19 October and he was buried privately in Woodend, Victoria.


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