Reports of plans to merge health services first made in Spring Street have been restated by the Shadow Health Minister Georgie Crozier in the North East.
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But Northern Victoria MP Jaclyn Symes says the reports are "nonsense".
AWH chief executive Michael Kalimnios acknowledged at the time there had been talks but the board had not "made any decision about progressing to a feasibility study".
In a notice of motion put to the Legislative Council sitting in Bright, Ms Crozier moved the Upper House "notes the secret plan to amalgamate local health services in regional Victoria by the Andrews Labor government".
Ms Crozier told The Border Mail strategic documents from 2017 referenced partnerships.
"If you look in the detail, it's talking about some of our regional hospitals going into these larger areas," she said.
"It's there in black and white ... my point is we already have partnerships with local hospitals into our larger regional areas.
"The Liberal-Nationals are concerned about the loss of services.
"The obvious one is Mildura into Bendigo, because that's in black and white ... in terms of North East, we don't know the extent of these amalgamations and where they'll go.
"We really do want a bit more transparency."
Ms Symes interjected during Ms Crozier's notice of motion, calling the issue "nonsense".
"I don't know the motives behind the opposition's scaremongering - to suggest that there's some secret amalgamation plan is just false," she told The Border Mail.
"We would never force amalgamations of our local health services in country Victoria.
"That's not to say that amalgamations don't occur when boards come together and present plans to government; that's certainly a process that could theoretically occur.
"But I just don't know where it's coming from."
Ms Symes said no talk of a North East merger or otherwise had been brought to her attention "except through the opposition".
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"My advice, back through the Minister for Health, is that this is just nonsense, there is no plan for government to force local hospitals into amalgamating," she said.
"That's not to say that hospitals shouldn't work together to create efficiencies, I think that's good public policy.
"But to suggest that you're going to smash people together in a forced amalgamation ... it's quite concerning when people prosecute this material that's not true and it gets people unnecessarily concerned."