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This is a Bill, not an Act. For current law, see the Acts databases.
Medical Indemnity (Prudential Supervision and Product Standards) Bill
2002
First Reading
$$T
2002
The Parliament of the
Commonwealth of Australia
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Presented and read a first
time
Medical Indemnity (Prudential Supervision
and Product Standards) Bill 2002
No. , 2002
(Treasury)
A Bill for an Act to make provision in relation to medical indemnity
cover for health care professionals, and for related purposes
Contents
A Bill for an Act to make provision in relation to medical
indemnity cover for health care professionals, and for related
purposes
The Parliament of Australia enacts:
Part 1Introductory
Division 1Preliminary
1 Short title
This Act may be cited as the Medical Indemnity (Prudential Supervision and
Product Standards) Act 2002.
2 Commencement
This Act commences, or is taken to have commenced, on 1 July
2003.
3 Objects
The objects of this Act are:
(a) to ensure that health care
professionals have access to medical indemnity cover that is provided by
properly regulated insurers; and
(b) to specify minimum standards
for medical indemnity cover that is provided to health care
professionals.
Division 2Interpretation
4 Definitions
General
(1) In this Act:
APRA means the Australian Prudential Regulation
Authority.
arrangement includes a contract of insurance.
ASIC means the Australian Securities and Investments
Commission.
breach the minimum cover rules has the meaning given by
subsection (8).
claim:
(a) means a claim or demand of any
kind (whether or not involving legal proceedings); and
(b) includes proceedings of any
kind including:
(i) proceedings before an
administrative tribunal or of an administrative nature; and
(ii) disciplinary proceedings
(including disciplinary proceedings conducted by or on behalf of a professional
body); and
(iii) an inquiry or
investigation;
and claim against a person includes an inquiry into, or an
investigation of, the persons conduct.
claims-made based cover has the meaning given by subsections
6(2) and (3).
claims period, in relation to a regulated insurance contract,
has the meaning given by subsection 21(3).
client, in relation to a regulated insurance contract, has
the meaning given by subsection 21(2).
come into effect, in relation to an arrangement, has the
meaning given by subsection (4).
compensation claim means a claim for compensation or damages
that is made against a health care professional in relation to a health care
incident.
complying offer has the meaning given by
section 24.
compulsory new contract offer, in relation to a new regulated
insurance contract, means an offer under section 22.
compulsory offer period, in relation to an offer made under
section 23, means the period referred to in paragraph 24(2)(b) in relation
to the offer.
constitutional corporation means a corporation to which
paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.
enter into, in relation to certain arrangements, has a
meaning affected by section 7.
entity means:
(a) a body corporate; or
(b) a partnership; or
(c) any other unincorporated
association or body of persons; or
(d) a trust.
general insurer has the same meaning as in the Insurance
Act 1973.
health care means any care, treatment, advice, service or
goods provided in respect of the physical or mental health of a
person.
health care incident, in relation to a health care
professional, means an incident that occurs in the course of, or in connection
with, the provision of health care by the health care professional.
health care professional:
(a) means an individual who
provides health care (whether for reward or not and whether as an employee, as
part of a business or on some other basis); and
(b) includes:
(i) a medical practitioner;
and
(ii) a registered health
professional.
incident includes:
(a) any act, omission or
circumstance; and
(b) an incident that is claimed to
have occurred.
incident-occurring based cover has the meaning given by
subsection 6(4).
indemnify has a meaning affected by
subsection (2).
medical practitioner means an individual registered or
licensed as a medical practitioner under a State or Territory law that provides
for the registration or licensing of medical practitioners.
minimum cover amount has the meaning given by
section 16.
new regulated insurance contract means a regulated insurance
contract to which section 22 applies.
otherwise uncovered prior incidents for a health care
professional has the meaning given by subsection 21(4).
payable, in relation to a compensation claim, has the meaning
given by subsection (7).
provide a financial service has the given by
section 766A of the Corporations Act 2001.
provide medical indemnity cover has the meaning given by
section 5.
prudential standard means a standard determined by APRA under
section 32 of the Insurance Act 1973.
registered health professional: an individual is a
registered health professional if:
(a) the individual practises a
health care related vocation; and
(b) the individual must be
registered under a State or Territory law to practise that vocation.
regulated insurance contract has the meaning given by
subsection 21(1).
relevant constitutional connection has the meaning given by
subsection (6).
renew has the meaning given by subsection (5).
without medical indemnity cover has the meaning given by
subsection (3).
Indemnify
(2) To avoid doubt, a person may,
for the purposes of this Act, indemnify someone else by
either:
(a) making a payment; or
(b) agreeing to make a
payment.
Note: A person may indemnify someone else by making a payment even if
the payment was not preceded by an agreement to pay.
Without medical indemnity cover for a health care incident
(3) For the purposes of this Act,
a health care professional is without medical indemnity cover
for a health care incident if:
(a) the health care incident
occurs during a particular period; and
(b) there is no arrangement under
which the health care professional will, or may, be indemnified for compensation
claims made against the health care professional in relation to health care
incidents occurring during that period.
When arrangement comes into effect
(4) For the purposes of this Act,
an arrangement under which a person provides medical indemnity cover for a
health care professional comes into effect on the first day on
which, under the arrangement, a claim against the person providing the cover may
be made.
Renewal of arrangement
(5) For the purposes of this Act,
an arrangement is renewed if:
(a) the arrangement is renewed;
or
(b) the period of the arrangement
is extended;
whether this happens:
(c) because of action taken, or
not taken, by a party or parties to the arrangement; or
(d) automatically; or
(e) by force of law.
Note: For example, if renewable insurance cover is provided under a
contract of insurance (the original contract), a further contract
of insurance may exist between the parties to the original contract by force of
subsection 58(3) of the Insurance Contracts Act 1984.
Relevant constitutional connection
(6) For the purposes of this Act,
an arrangement has a relevant constitutional connection
if:
(a) the arrangement provides for
insurance with respect to which the Commonwealth Parliament has power to make
laws under paragraph 51(xiv) of the Constitution; or
(b) the arrangement is entered
into in the course of trade and commerce:
(i) with other countries;
or
(ii) among the States;
or
(iii) between a State and a
Territory; or
(c) the arrangement is entered
into in, or is governed by the laws of, a Territory.
Amount payable in relation to compensation claim
(7) For the purposes of this Act,
the amount that is payable in relation to a compensation
claim includes an amount that would be paid to meet legal and
other expenses that are directly attributable to any negotiations, arbitration
or proceedings in relation to the compensation claim.
Breaching the minimum cover rules
(8) For the purposes of this Act,
a regulated insurance contract breaches the minimum cover rules if
subsection 17(2), 18(3) or 19(3) applies to the regulated insurance
contract.
Claim against health care professional during particular
period
(9) A reference in this Act, in
relation to:
(a) a contract of insurance under
which the insurer provides medical indemnity cover for a health care
professional; or
(b) an offer by an insurer to
provide medical indemnity cover for a health care professional;
to a compensation claim against the health care professional being made, or
having to be made, during a particular period is a reference to any one or more
of the following happening, or having to happen, during that period:
(c) the compensation claim being
made against the health care professional;
(d) the compensation claim being
notified to the insurer;
(e) the health care incident to
which the compensation claim relates being notified to the insurer;
(f) a claim being made against the
insurer in relation to the compensation claim;
(g) an event prescribed by the
regulations.
5 Providing medical indemnity cover
(1) A person provides
medical indemnity cover for a health care professional if, under an
arrangement, the person must or may indemnify the health care professional in
relation to claims that may be made against the health care professional in
relation to health care incidents.
(2) The arrangement:
(a) may be one under which the
indemnity is provided at the persons discretion; and
(b) may be, but need not be, an
arrangement between the person and the health care professional; and
(c) may be:
(i) one under which the health
care professional is indemnified directly; or
(ii) one under which the health
care professional is indemnified indirectly through an entity or entities
interposed between the person and the health care professional.
6 Claims-made based cover and incident-occurring based
cover
(1) This section tells you what is
meant by claims-made based cover and incident-occurring
based cover when those terms are used in this Act. There are some kinds
of medical indemnity cover that fall outside both those terms.
(2) For the purposes of this Act,
the cover provided for by a contract of insurance is claims-made based
cover if:
(a) under the contract, the
insurer provides medical indemnity cover for a health care professional in
relation to a compensation claim against the health care professional in
relation to a health care incident only if:
(i) the incident occurs during a
period specified in the contract (the incidents period);
and
(ii) the compensation claim is
made against the health care professional during a period specified in the
contract (the claims period); and
(b) the incidents period is not a
period that has ended before the claims period begins; and
(c) the claims period is
fixed.
Note 1: Subparagraph (a)(ii)subsection 4(9) operates on the
reference in this subparagraph to the claim being made during a
period.
Note 2: Pure ERB cover (which has a defined incidents period that ends
before the claims period begins) does not qualify because of paragraph (b).
DDR cover (which does not have a fixed claims period) does not qualify because
of paragraph (c).
(3) To avoid doubt, the claims
period for the contract is taken to be fixed even if the claims period is
capable of being extended:
(a) by agreement between the
parties to the contract; or
(b) by renewal of the
contract.
(4) For the purposes of this Act,
the cover provided for by a contract of insurance is incident-occurring
based cover if:
(a) under the contract, the
insurer provides medical indemnity cover for a health care professional in
relation to a compensation claim in relation to a health care incident only if
the incident occurs during a period specified in the contract; and
(b) under the contract, the
insurer provides that medical indemnity cover:
(i) regardless of when the
compensation claim is made against the health care professional; and
(ii) whether or not the health
care professional has died, become permanently disabled or retired.
Note: ERB cover (which has a fixed claims period) does not qualify
because of subparagraph (b)(i) and DDR cover does not qualify because of
subparagraph (b)(ii).
7 When certain DDR arrangements are taken to be entered
into
(1) For the purposes of this Act,
if:
(a) under an arrangement, a person
(the cover provider) will or may provide medical indemnity cover
of a particular kind for a health care professional; and
(b) the cover provider will or may
provide that cover only if:
(i) a particular period has
expired; and
(ii) the health care professional
dies, becomes permanently disabled or retires; and
(c) the arrangement is not a
contract of insurance;
the cover provider is taken to enter into the arrangement, to
the extent to which it relates to that cover, at the earliest time at
which:
(d) there are no conditions that
need to be satisfied for the cover to be provided for the health care
professional; or
(e) the only conditions that need
to be satisfied for the cover to be provided for the health care professional
are conditions that relate to:
(i) payments being made to the
cover provider for the cover; or
(ii) the making of a claim against
the cover provider under the arrangement.
(2) Without limiting
subparagraph (1)(b)(i), the period referred to in that subparagraph may be
specified as a minimum period during which the health care professional is a
member of a particular body.
Division 3Application
of Act
8 Application of Act
(1) This Act does not apply to
State insurance (whether or not extending beyond the limits of the State
concerned).
(2) This Act does not apply
to:
(a) an arrangement under which
medical indemnity cover is provided by:
(i) the Commonwealth, a public
authority of the Commonwealth or an instrumentality or agency of the Crown in
right of the Commonwealth; or
(ii) a State, a public authority
of a State or an instrumentality or agency of the Crown in right of a State;
or
(iii) a Territory, a public
authority of a Territory or an instrumentality or agency of the Crown in right
of a Territory; or
(b) an arrangement under which
medical indemnity cover is provided by a person to a health care professional
who is an employee of the person; or
(c) an arrangement under which
medical indemnity cover is provided by an employer in relation to health care
provided to the employers employees:
(i) by an employee of the
employer; or
(ii) under a contract between the
employer and the person providing the care; or
(d) an arrangement under which
medical indemnity cover is provided by a body corporate prescribed by the
regulations; or
(e) an arrangement of a kind
prescribed by the regulations.
9 Act extends to external Territories
This Act extends to every external Territory.
Part 2Prudential
requirements for provision of medical indemnity cover
Division 1Provision of medical indemnity cover
10 Medical indemnity cover to be provided only by general insurers and
only under contracts of insurance
(1) This subsection applies to a
person if, on or after 1 July 2003:
(a) the person:
(i) offers to enter into;
or
(ii) invites an offer to enter
into;
an arrangement under which the person would provide medical indemnity cover for
a health care professional; or
(b) the person enters into an
arrangement under which the person provides medical indemnity cover for a health
care professional; or
(c) an arrangement under which the
person provides medical indemnity cover for a health care professional comes
into effect; or
(d) the person offers to renew an
arrangement under which a person provides medical indemnity cover for a health
care professional; or
(e) an arrangement under which the
person provides medical indemnity cover for a health care professional is
renewed.
The relevant medical indemnity cover is the cover referred to
in paragraph (a), (b), (c), (d), or (e).
(2) A person (the cover
provider) commits an offence if:
(a) subsection (1) applies to
the cover provider; and
(b) either:
(i) the cover provider is a
constitutional corporation; or
(ii) the cover provider is not a
constitutional corporation but the arrangement has, or would have, a relevant
constitutional connection; and
(c) either:
(i) the cover provider is not a
general insurer; or
(ii) the relevant medical
indemnity cover is not, or would not be, effected by means of a contract of
insurance.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months.
(3) To avoid doubt:
(a) paragraph (1)(a) applies
to offers or invitations that are received in Australia or the external
Territories:
(i) regardless of where any
resulting arrangement is entered into; and
(ii) whether or not any resulting
arrangement is governed by the laws of a State or Territory; and
(b) paragraph (1)(d) applies
to offers that are received in Australia or the external Territories:
(i) regardless of where any
resulting renewal takes place; and
(ii) whether or not the
arrangement is governed by the laws of a State or Territory.
11 Intermediarys responsibilities
(1) A person (the
intermediary) commits an offence if:
(a) the intermediary provides a
financial service on or after 1 July 2003; and
(b) in the course of providing
that service, the intermediary:
(i) arranges, or offers to
arrange, for someone to enter into or renew; or
(ii) recommends that someone enter
into or renew;
an arrangement under which a person (the cover provider) provides,
or would provide, medical indemnity cover for a health care professional;
and
(c) either:
(i) the cover provider is a
constitutional corporation; or
(ii) the arrangement has, or would
have, a relevant constitutional connection; and
(d) either:
(i) the cover provider is not a
general insurer; or
(ii) the arrangement is not, or
would not be, effected by means of a contract of insurance.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months.
(2) It does not matter whether the
intermediary provides the financial service in the intermediarys own right or as
a representative of another person.
(3) To avoid doubt, the
intermediary commits the offence whether or not the cover provider commits, or
would commit, an offence against subsection 10(2).
Division 2Transitional
arrangements
12 Effect of determination under subsection 13(3)
Section applies to body corporate while determination under subsection
13(3) is in force
(1) This section applies to a body
corporate while a determination under subsection 13(3) is in force in relation
to the body corporate.
Authorisation to carry on insurance business in Australia
(2) APRA must not refuse an
application by the body corporate under section 12 of the Insurance Act
1973 on the basis that the body corporate does not, or would not, meet the
requirements of a prudential standard to the extent to which the standard
imposes a minimum capital requirement.
Grounds for revoking authorisation
(3) Paragraph 15(1)(e) of the
Insurance Act 1973 does not apply to the body corporate.
Application of prudential standard imposing minimum capital
requirement
(4) Any prudential standard, to
the extent to which the standard imposes a minimum capital requirement, does not
apply to the body corporate.
13 APRA determination that minimum capital requirements do not
apply
Application for determination
(1) A body corporate
that:
(a) is an MDO within the meaning
of the Medical Indemnity Act 2002; or
(b) is prescribed by the
regulations for the purposes of this paragraph; or
(c) is related (within the meaning
of the Corporations Act 2001) to a body corporate to which
paragraph (a) or (b) applies;
may apply to APRA for a determination under subsection (3) that the
minimum capital requirements do not apply to the body corporate during the
period (the transition period) that starts on 1 July 2003 and
ends on 30 June 2008.
(2) The application must be in the
form prescribed by the regulations.
Determination that minimum capital requirements do not
apply
(3) APRA must determine that the
minimum capital requirements do not apply to the body corporate during the
transition period if:
(a) the body corporate is not a
general insurer when it applies; and
(b) when it applies, the body
corporate does not, or would not, satisfy the prudential standards, to the
extent to which they impose minimum capital requirements; and
(c) the body corporate lodges a
funding plan with the application; and
(d) the funding plan:
(i) is in the form prescribed by
the regulations; and
(ii) is certified by an
independent auditor and by an independent actuary; and
. (iii) complies with the guidelines issued by APRA under
subsection (9).
The determination must be in writing and APRA must give the body corporate
a copy of the determination within 7 days after making the
determination.
When determination ceases to have effect
(4) The determination ceases to
have effect:
(a) on 30 June 2008;
or
(b) if APRA revokes the
determination before 30 June 2008on the day specified in the revocation as
the day on which the revocation takes effect.
Revocation of determination
(5) APRA may revoke the
determination if and only if:
(a) the body corporate:
(i) fails to meet a commitment
given, or a target set, in the funding plan; or
(ii) otherwise fails to comply
with the funding plan;
and the failure is substantial; or
(b) the body corporate no longer
carries on a business of providing medical indemnity cover for health care
professionals; or
(c) the body corporate requests
APRA, in writing, to revoke the determination.
(6) The revocation must:
(a) be in writing; and
(b) specify the day on which the
revocation takes effect.
The day specified under paragraph (b) must be at least 28 days after
the day on which the revocation is made.
(7) APRA must give a copy of the
revocation to the body corporate within 7 days after the day on which the
revocation is made.
No determinations to be made after 1 July 2005
(8) No determinations under
subsection (3) are to be made on or after 1 July 2005.
APRA guidelines
(9) APRA may issue guidelines
on:
(a) the matters to be included in
a funding plan lodged for the purposes of this section (including the nature of
the commitments to be given, and the targets to be set, in the plan);
and
(b) the matters as to which an
independent auditor or independent actuary is to certify; and
(c) the qualifications an auditor
or actuary must have to give certificates for the purposes of this section;
and
(d) the necessary degree of
independence from a body corporate that an auditor or actuary must have to give
a certificate in relation to the body corporates funding plan.
(10) Without limiting
paragraph (9)(a), the guidelines may provide that the funding plan must
include a specified commitment by the body corporate to report to APRA in
relation to its compliance with the funding plan.
(11) A guideline issued under
subsection (9) is a disallowable instrument for the purposes of
section 46A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.
14 Administrative review
An application may be made to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal for review
of:
(a) a decision by APRA not to make
a determination under subsection 13(3); or
(b) a decision by APRA under
subsection 13(5) to revoke a determination made under subsection
13(3).
Note: Section 27A of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act
1975 requires notification of a decision that is reviewable.
15 Application of section 115A of the Insurance Act
1973
Section 115A of the Insurance Act 1973 applies as if a reference to
this Part in the definition of relevant legislation in
subsection (5) of that section included a reference to a funding plan
lodged with an application made under section 13 of this Act.
Part 3Product
standards for medical indemnity insurance contracts
Division 1Minimum cover
16 Minimum cover amount
The minimum cover amount for the purposes of this Division
is:
(a) $5 million; or
(b) such other amount as is
prescribed by the regulations.
17 Minimum cover for single claim
Circumstances in which section applies
(1) This subsection applies to a
person if:
(a) under a contract of insurance
(the relevant contract), the person provides medical indemnity
cover for a health care professional; and
(b) the health care professional
is:
(i) a medical practitioner;
or
(ii) a registered health
professional prescribed by the regulations.
Offence
(2) A person (the
insurer) commits an offence if:
(a) subsection (1) applies to
the insurer; and
(b) the relevant contract is
entered into, comes into effect or is renewed at a particular time on or after
1 July 2003; and
(c) the maximum amount payable by
the insurer under the relevant contract in relation to a single compensation
claim made against the health care professional would, but for
subsection (4), be less than the minimum cover amount applicable at that
time.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months.
(3) Subsection (2) does not
apply if it would be reasonable to assume, at the time the relevant contract is
entered into, comes into effect or is renewed, that every health care incident
to which the compensation claim would relate would be one occurring outside
Australia and the external Territories.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter
in this subsection (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code).
Maximum amount payable for single claim
(4) If:
(a) subsection (1) applies to
a person (the insurer); and
(b) the relevant contract is
entered into, comes into effect or is renewed at a particular time on or after
1 July 2003; and
(c) a compensation claim is made
against the health care professional; and
(d) an amount is payable by the
insurer under the relevant contract in relation to the compensation claim;
and
(e) the maximum amount payable by
the insurer under the relevant contract in relation to the compensation claim
would, but for this subsection, be less than the minimum cover amount applicable
at that time;
the maximum amount payable by the insurer under the relevant contract in
relation to the compensation claim is the minimum cover amount applicable at
that time (instead of the maximum amount provided for in the relevant
contract).
(5) Subsection (4) does not
apply if every health care incident to which the compensation claim relates is
one occurring outside Australia and the external Territories.
(6) To avoid doubt,
subsection (4) applies whether or not the insurer is convicted of an
offence against subsection (2).
18 Minimum annual coverincident-occurring based cover
Circumstances in which section applies
(1) This subsection applies to a
person if:
(a) under a contract of insurance
(the relevant contract), the person provides medical indemnity
cover for a health care professional; and
(b) the health care professional
is:
(i) a medical practitioner;
or
(ii) a registered health
professional prescribed by the regulations; and
(c) the relevant contract provides
for incident-occurring based cover.
Note: For incident-occurring based cover, see subsection
6(4). For the purposes of this section, ERB and DDR cover are not
incident-occurring based cover.
(2) For the purposes of this
section:
(a) the qualifying incident
period is the period during which a health care incident must occur for
the person to provide medical indemnity cover under the relevant contract in
relation to the incident; and
(b) there is only one
relevant period and it is the qualifying incident period if the
qualifying incident period is a year or shorter than a year; and
(c) the year starting at the
beginning of the qualifying incident period, and each succeeding year or part of
a year in the qualifying incident period, is a relevant period if
the qualifying incident period is longer than a year.
Offence
(3) A person (the
insurer) commits an offence if:
(a) subsection (1) applies to
the insurer; and
(b) the relevant contract is
entered into, comes into effect or is renewed at a particular time on or after
1 July 2003; and
(c) the maximum amount payable, in
aggregate, by the insurer under the relevant contract in relation to all the
compensation claims that are made against the health care professional in
relation to health care incidents that occur during a particular relevant period
would, but for subsection (5), be less than the minimum cover amount
applicable at that time.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months.
(4) Subsection (3) does not
apply if it would be reasonable to assume, at the time the relevant contract is
entered into, comes into effect or is renewed, that every health care incident
to which the compensation claims would relate would be one occurring outside
Australia and the external Territories.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter
in this subsection (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code).
Maximum amount payable for multiple claims
(5) If:
(a) subsection (1) applies to
a person (the insurer); and
(b) the relevant contract is
entered into, comes into effect or is renewed at a particular time on or after
1 July 2003; and
(c) amounts are payable by the
insurer under the relevant contract in relation to 2 or more compensation claims
(the multiple claims) that are made against the health care
professional in relation to health care incidents that occur in a particular
relevant period; and
(d) the maximum amount payable by
the insurer under the relevant contract in relation to the multiple claims
would, but for this subsection, be less than the minimum cover amount applicable
at that time;
the maximum amount payable, in aggregate, by the insurer under the relevant
contract in relation to the multiple claims is the minimum cover amount
applicable at that time (instead of the maximum amount provided for in the
relevant contract).
(6) Subsection (5) does not
apply if every health care incident to which the multiple claims relate is one
occurring outside Australia and the external Territories.
(7) To avoid doubt,
subsection (5) applies whether or not the insurer is convicted of an
offence against subsection (3).
19 Minimum annual coverother cover
Circumstances in which section applies
(1) This subsection applies to a
person if:
(a) under a contract of insurance
(the relevant contract), the person provides medical indemnity
cover for a health care professional; and
(b) the health care professional
is:
(i) a medical practitioner;
or
(ii) a registered health
professional prescribed by the regulations; and
(c) the contract does not provide
for incident-occurring based cover.
Note: For incident-occurring based cover, see subsection
6(4). For the purposes of this section, ERB and DDR cover are not
incident-occurring based cover.
(2) For the purposes of this
section:
(a) the qualifying claims
period is the period specified in the relevant contract as the period
during which a compensation claim against the health care professional has to be
made for medical indemnity cover to be provided in relation to the compensation
claim; and
(b) there is only one
relevant period and it is the qualifying claims period if the
qualifying claims period is a year or shorter than a year; and
(c) the year starting at the
beginning of the qualifying claims period, and each succeeding year or part of a
year in the qualifying claims period, is a relevant period if the
qualifying claims period is longer than a year.
Note: Paragraph (a)subsection 4(9) operates on the reference in
this paragraph to the claim having to be made during a period.
Offence
(3) A person (the
insurer) commits an offence if:
(a) subsection (1) applies to
the insurer; and
(b) the relevant contract is
entered into, comes into effect or is renewed at a particular time on or after
1 July 2003; and
(c) the maximum amount payable, in
aggregate, by the insurer under the relevant contract in relation to all the
compensation claims that are made against the health care professional during a
particular relevant period would, but for subsection (5), be less than the
minimum cover amount applicable at that time.
Note: Paragraph (c)subsection 4(9) operates on the reference in
this paragraph to the claim having to be made during a period.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months.
(4) Subsection (3) does not
apply if it would be reasonable to assume, at the time the relevant contract is
entered into, comes into effect or is renewed, that every health care incident
to which the compensation claims would relate would be one occurring outside
Australia and the external Territories.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter
in this subsection (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code).
Maximum amount payable for multiple claims
(5) If:
(a) subsection (1) applies to
a person (the insurer); and
(b) the relevant contract is
entered into, comes into effect or is renewed at a particular time on or after
1 July 2003; and
(c) amounts are payable by the
insurer under the relevant contract in relation to 2 or more compensation claims
(the multiple claims) that are made against the health care
professional during a particular relevant period; and
(d) the maximum amount payable by
the insurer under the relevant contract in relation to the multiple claims
would, but for this subsection, be less than the minimum cover amount applicable
at that time;
the maximum amount payable, in aggregate, by the insurer under the relevant
contract in relation to the multiple claims is the minimum cover amount
applicable at that time (instead of the maximum amount provided for in the
relevant contract).
Note: Paragraph (c)subsection 4(9) operates on the reference in
this paragraph to the claim having to be made during a period.
(6) Subsection (5) does not
apply if every health care incident to which the multiple claims relate is one
occurring outside Australia and the external Territories.
(7) To avoid doubt,
subsection (5) applies whether or not the insurer is convicted of an
offence against subsection (3).
20 Amount payable by insurer
To avoid doubt, in working out for the purposes of this Division the maximum
amount payable by an insurer under a contract of insurance, disregard the
following:
(a) any right the insurer may have
to a high cost claim indemnity under the Medical Indemnity Act
2002;
(b) any right the insurer may have
to contribution from another insurer;
(c) any right to which the insurer
is subrogated under the contract of insurance.
Division 2Offers
to provide retroactive and run-off cover for otherwise uncovered prior
incidents
Subdivision ARegulated insurance contracts
21 Regulated insurance contracts
Regulated insurance contract
(1) For the purposes of this
Division, a contract is a regulated insurance contract
if:
(a) the contract is a contract of
insurance under which the insurer provides medical indemnity cover for a health
care professional in relation to compensation claims; and
(b) the health care professional
is:
(i) a medical practitioner;
or
(ii) a registered health
professional prescribed by the regulations; and
(c) the cover provided for by the
contract is claims-made based cover; and
(d) the contract is entered into,
comes into effect or is renewed on or after 1 July 2003.
Note: Paragraph (c)for claims-made based cover, see
subsections 6(2) and (3). For the purposes of this section, ERB and DDR cover
are not claims-made based cover.
Client
(2) For the purposes of this
Division, the client for the regulated insurance contract is the
other party to the regulated insurance contract (who may be the health care
professional or someone else).
Claims period
(3) For the purposes of this
Division, the claims period for the regulated insurance contract
is the period specified in the contract as the period during which a
compensation claim against the health care professional has to be made for
medical indemnity cover to be provided in relation to the compensation
claim.
Note: Subsection 4(9) operates on the reference to the claim having to
be made during a period.
Health care professionals otherwise uncovered prior
incidents
(4) For the purposes of this
Division, the health care professionals otherwise uncovered prior
incidents for the regulated insurance contract are:
(a) for an offer to be made under
section 22the health care incidents:
(i) that occurred before the start
of the claims period for the regulated insurance contract; and
(ii) for which the health care
professional would otherwise be without medical indemnity cover; and
(b) for an offer to be made under
section 23the health care incidents:
(i) that have occurred, or will
occur, before the contract that arises from the offer would take effect;
and
(ii) for which the health care
professional would otherwise be without medical indemnity cover.
Extended cover period
(5) For the purposes of this
Division, the extended cover period for the regulated insurance
contract is the period of:
(a) 5 years; or
(b) such longer period as is
prescribed by the regulations for the kind of cover provided by the
contract;
that starts when the claims period for the regulated insurance contract
ends.
(6) The regulations made for the
purposes of paragraph (5)(b) may prescribe different periods for regulated
insurance contracts that provide different kinds of cover.
Subdivision BInsurers responsibilities
22 Additional offer of retroactive cover when regulated insurance
contract entered into, comes into effect or is renewed
Offencecompulsory offer
(1) A person (the
insurer) commits an offence if:
(a) a regulated insurance contract
is entered into, comes into effect or is renewed; and
(b) the insurer provides medical
indemnity cover for a health care professional under the regulated insurance
contract; and
(c) the insurer does not make an
offer (the compulsory offer) to the client that satisfies all of
the following subparagraphs:
(i) the offer is an offer to
provide medical indemnity cover for the health care professional in relation to
all compensation claims that are made against the health care professional,
during a period that includes the whole of the claims period for the regulated
insurance contract, in relation to the health care professionals otherwise
uncovered prior incidents;
(ii) the offer is made at the same
time as the insurer makes the offer or the invitation that leads to the
regulated insurance contract or the renewal;
(iii) the offer is a complying
offer.
Note 1: For complying offer, see
section 24.
Note 2: Subparagraph (c)(i)subsection 4(9) operates on the
reference in this subparagraph to the claims being made during a
period.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months.
Offenceentering into regulated insurance contract etc. before response
to compulsory offer received
(2) A person (the
insurer) commits an offence if:
(a) a regulated insurance contract
is entered into, comes into effect or is renewed; and
(b) the insurer provides medical
indemnity cover for a health care professional under the regulated insurance
contract; and
(c) the regulated insurance
contract is entered into, comes into effect or is renewed before the client has
given the insurer a written response to the compulsory offer.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months.
Offencerecord keeping
(3) A person (the
insurer) commits an offence if:
(a) a regulated insurance contract
is entered into, comes into effect or is renewed; and
(b) the insurer provides medical
indemnity cover for a health care professional under the regulated insurance
contract; and
(c) the insurer does not keep a
copy of the following:
(i) the compulsory
offer;
(ii) the clients written response
to the compulsory offer;
(iii) any other offer that the
insurer makes to the client, while the compulsory offer is open for acceptance
by the client, to provide medical indemnity cover for the health care
professional in relation to an otherwise uncovered prior incident of the health
care professional;
(iv) any invitations that the
insurer makes to the client, while the compulsory offer is open for acceptance
by the client, to make an offer to enter into a contract of insurance under
which the insurer would provide medical indemnity cover for the health care
professional in relation to an otherwise uncovered prior incident of the health
care professional;
for the period of 5 years starting on the day on which the compulsory offer is
made.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months.
Defences for offences against subsections (1), (2) and
(3)
(4) Subsections (1), (2) and
(3) do not apply if:
(a) the regulated insurance
contract provides medical indemnity cover for the health care professional in
relation to all the compensation claims referred to in paragraph (1)(c);
or
(b) the health care professional
has no otherwise uncovered prior incidents; or
(c) every health care incident
covered by the regulated insurance contract is, or would be, one occurring
outside Australia and the external Territories.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter
in this subsection (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code).
(5) Subsection (1) does not
apply if:
(a) the insurer makes an offer for
the purposes of subsection (1); and
(b) the only reason why the offer
does not satisfy subparagraph (1)(c)(i) is that the offer does not extend
to some of the health care professionals otherwise uncovered prior incidents;
and
(c) the insurer has reasonable
grounds for believing that the offer does extend to all the health care
professionals otherwise uncovered prior incidents.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter
in this subsection (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code).
23 Additional offer of run-off cover when particular events happen
during claims period for regulated insurance contract
Offencecompulsory offer
(1) A person (the
insurer) commits an offence if:
(a) the insurer provides medical
indemnity cover for a health care professional under a regulated insurance
contract; and
(b) one of the following events
occurs during the claims period for the regulated insurance contract:
(i) the health care professional
dies;
(ii) the health care professional
becomes permanently disabled;
(iii) the health care professional
retires;
(iv) the client terminates the
regulated insurance contract or lets it expire without renewing it;
(v) the client requests the
insurer in writing, during the claims period or within 28 days after the end of
the claims period, to make a complying offer to provide medical indemnity cover
for the health care professional under this subparagraph;
(vi) an event prescribed by the
regulations occurs or circumstances prescribed by the regulations arise;
and
(c) the insurer does not make an
offer (the compulsory offer) to the client that satisfies all of
the following subparagraphs:
(i) the offer is an offer to
provide medical indemnity cover for the health care professional in relation to
all compensation claims that are made against the health care professional,
during a period that includes the whole of the extended cover period for the
regulated insurance contract, in relation to the health care professionals
otherwise uncovered prior incidents;
(ii) the offer is made within 28
days after the insurer becomes aware of that event;
(iii) the offer is a complying
offer.
Note 1: For extended cover period, see subsection
21(5).
Note 2: For complying offer, see
section 24.
Note 3: Subparagraph (c)(i)subsection 4(9) operates on the
reference in this subparagraph to the claims being made during a
period.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months.
(2) The insurer may satisfy
subparagraph (1)(c)(i) by:
(a) making an offer to provide the
cover referred to in that subparagraph for a single period that includes the
whole of the extended cover period for the regulated insurance contract;
or
(b) both:
(i) making an offer to provide the
cover referred to in that subparagraph for a period of 1 year starting at the
beginning of the extended cover period for the regulated insurance contract;
and
(ii) including in the offer an
option for the client to renew the cover annually at least until the end of that
period.
Note: For extended cover period, see subsection
21(5).
Offenceentering into new contract before response to compulsory offer
received
(3) A person (the
insurer) commits an offence if:
(a) the person provides medical
indemnity cover for a health care professional under a regulated insurance
contract; and
(b) paragraph (1)(b) applies
to the regulated insurance contract; and
(c) after the insurer makes the
compulsory offer, the insurer subsequently enters into a contract of insurance
with the client to provide medical indemnity cover for the health care
professional in relation to an otherwise uncovered prior incident of the health
care professional; and
(d) the contract referred to in
paragraph (c) is not entered into in response to the compulsory offer;
and
(e) the contract referred to in
paragraph (c) is entered into before the client has given the insurer a
written response to the compulsory offer.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months.
Offencerecord keeping
(4) A person (the
insurer) commits an offence if:
(a) the insurer provides medical
indemnity cover for a health care professional under a regulated insurance
contract; and
(b) paragraph (1)(b) applies
to the regulated insurance contract; and
(c) the insurer does not keep the
following:
(i) a copy of the compulsory
offer;
(ii) either a copy of the clients
written response to the compulsory offer or a written record (made within 14
days after the end of the compulsory offer period) of the clients response, or
failure to respond, to the compulsory offer;
(iii) a copy of any other offer
that the insurer makes to the client, while the compulsory offer is open for
acceptance by the client, to provide medical indemnity cover for the health care
professional in relation to an otherwise uncovered prior incident of the health
care professional;
(iv) a copy of any invitations
that the insurer makes to the client, while the compulsory offer is open for
acceptance by the client, to make an offer to enter into a contract of insurance
under which the insurer would provide medical indemnity cover for the health
care professional in relation to an otherwise uncovered prior incident of the
health care professional;
for the period of 5 years starting on the day on which the compulsory offer is
made.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months.
Defences for offences against subsections (1), (3) and
(4)
(5) Subsections (1), (3) and
(4) do not apply if every health care incident covered by the regulated
insurance contract is, or would be, one occurring outside Australia and the
external Territories.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter
in this subsection (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code).
(6) Subsection (1) does not
apply if:
(a) the insurer makes an offer for
the purposes of subsection (1); and
(b) the only reason why the offer
does not satisfy subparagraph (1)(c)(i) is that the offer does not extend
to some of the health care professionals otherwise uncovered prior incidents;
and
(c) the insurer has reasonable
grounds for believing that the offer does extend to all the health care
professionals otherwise uncovered prior incidents.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter
in this subsection (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code).
24 Complying offer
Complying offer testgeneral
(1) For the purposes of
section 22 or 23, a person (the insurer) who provides medical
indemnity cover under a regulated insurance contract makes a complying
offer to the client to provide medical indemnity cover for a health care
professional if and only if:
(a) the offer is to provide
medical indemnity cover for the health care professional under a contract of
insurance; and
(b) the offer complies with
subsection (2); and
(c) the offer also complies with
subsection (4) if the offer is made for the purposes of
section 23.
The offer must be made to the health care professionals legal personal
representative if the health care professional has died.
(2) The offer complies with this
subsection if and only if:
(a) the offer is made in writing;
and
(b) the offer remains open for
acceptance by the client for a period of at least 28 days after the day on which
the offer is made; and
(c) the procedures for dealing
with claims under the contract being offered are substantially the same as those
provided for in:
(i) the proposed regulated
contract (if the offer is made for the purposes of section 22);
or
(ii) the current regulated
contract (if the offer is made for the purposes of section 23);
and
(d) the claims and incidents
covered, and the exclusions from the claims and incidents covered, by the
contract being offered are reasonable and appropriate having regard to the
nature of the health care provided by the health care professional during the
period or periods during which the incidents covered by the contract occurred;
and
(e) the offer specifies the
premium payable by the client for the cover being offered; and
(f) the premium payable by the
client for the cover being offered is reasonable (see subsection (3));
and
(g) the other terms and conditions
of the contract being offered comply with the requirements (if any) prescribed
by the regulations for the purposes of this paragraph; and
(h) the offer includes a clear,
concise and effective explanation of:
(i) the significant
characteristics and features of the cover being offered; and
(ii) the significant rights, terms
and conditions and obligations attaching to the cover being offered;
and
(iii) the risks involved for the
health care professional in not accepting the offer; and
(iv) the options that will be
available to the health care professional if the health care professional does
not accept the offer; and
(v) any other matters prescribed
by the regulations.
Matters to be taken into account in determining whether premium is
reasonable
(3) In deciding whether the
premium payable by the client for the cover being offered is reasonable, regard
is to be had to:
(a) the nature of the risks being
assumed by the insurer; and
(b) the claims handling expenses,
and other administrative expenses, the insurer has incurred and can reasonably
be expected to incur in relation to the cover being offered; and
(c) the expenses the insurer can
reasonably be expected to incur in obtaining appropriate reinsurance;
and
(d) the expenses the insurer can
reasonably be expected to incur in capital raising and prudential compliance
that are reasonably attributable to the cover being offered; and
(e) the amount that represents a
reasonable profit margin for the insurer; and
(f) the amount of any relevant
taxes or statutory charges payable by the insurer; and
(g) the information provided, or
not provided, to the insurer by the client in relation to matters relevant to
assessing the risk being assumed by the insurer; and
(h) the guidelines (if any) issued
by APRA for the purposes of this paragraph.
Offer made for the purposes of section 23minimum cover
limit
(4) The offer complies with this
subsection if and only if:
(a) the individual claim limit for
the contract being offered is not less than the individual claim limit for the
current regulated contract; and
(b) the annual aggregate claim
limit for the contract being offered is not less than the aggregate claim limit
for the current regulated contract.
Definitions
(5) In this section:
annual aggregate claim limit for a contract of insurance
means the maximum amount payable, in aggregate, by the insurer, under the
contract, in relation to all compensation claims made against the health care
professional, during a relevant period for the contract, in relation to health
care incidents.
current regulated contract means the regulated insurance
contract referred to in paragraph 23(1)(a).
individual claim limit for a contract of insurance means the
maximum amount payable under the contract by the insurer in relation to an
individual compensation claim made against the health care professional in
relation to an individual health care incident.
proposed regulated contract means the regulated insurance
contract referred to in paragraph 22(1)(a).
(6) For the purposes of the
definition of annual aggregate claim limit in
subsection (5):
(a) the qualifying claims
period for a contract of insurance is the period specified in the
contract as the period during which a compensation claim against the health care
professional must be made for medical indemnity cover to be provided in relation
to the compensation claim; and
(b) there is only one
relevant period and it is the qualifying claims period if the
qualifying claims period is a year or shorter than a year; and
(c) the year starting at the
beginning of the qualifying claims period, and each succeeding year or part of a
year in the qualifying claims period, is a relevant period if the
qualifying claims period is longer than a year.
Note: Paragraph (a)subsection 4(9) operates on the reference in
this paragraph to the claim having to be made during a period.
25 APRA guidelines
(1) APRA may issue guidelines for
determining for the purposes of section 24 whether a premium payable by an
insured under a contract of insurance for particular cover is
reasonable.
(2) A guideline issued under
subsection (1) is a disallowable instrument for the purposes of
section 46A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.
26 Federal Court may order insurer to make offer
(1) If an insurer contravenes
subsection 22(1) or 23(1) by failing to make an offer, the Federal Court of
Australia may, on application by the client or ASIC, grant an injunction
ordering the insurer to make an offer.
(2) The Court may specify in its
order:
(a) the terms in which the offer
is to be made; and
(b) the time by which the offer
must be made; and
(c) the period for which the offer
must be open for acceptance by the health care professional; and
(d) the time from which the
contract that results from the offer is to have effect if the offer is
accepted.
Division 3Intermediarys
responsibilities
27 Intermediarys responsibilities
(1) A person (the
intermediary) commits an offence if:
(a) the intermediary provides a
financial service on or after 1 July 2003; and
(b) in the course of providing
that service, the intermediary:
(i) arranges, or offers to
arrange, for someone to enter into or renew a regulated insurance contract;
or
(ii) recommends that someone enter
into or renew a regulated insurance contract; and
(c) either:
(i) the regulated insurance
contract breaches, or would breach, the minimum cover rules; or
(ii) the regulated insurance
contract is a new regulated insurance contract and the insurer does not make a
compulsory new contract offer in relation to the regulated insurance
contract.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months.
(2) It does not matter whether the
intermediary provides the financial service in the intermediarys own right or as
a representative of another person.
(3) Subparagraph (1)(b)(ii)
does not apply to a recommendation by the intermediary if the intermediary has
reasonable grounds to believe that a compulsory new contract offer will be made
in relation to the new regulated insurance contract before that contract is
entered into or is renewed.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter
in this subsection (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code).
(4) To avoid doubt, the
intermediary commits the offence whether or not the insurer commits, or would
commit, an offence against subsection 17(2), 18(3), 19(3) or 22(1).
Part 4Administration
28 APRA to have general administration of Part 2
(1) Subject to
subsection (2), APRA has the general administration of
Part 2.
(2) The Minister may give APRA
directions about the performance or exercise of its functions or powers under
Part 2.
29 APRA Act secrecy provisions apply
Section 56 of the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority Act
1998 prohibits certain disclosures of information received under this
Act.
30 ASIC to have general administration of Part 3
(1) Subject to
subsection (2), ASIC has the general administration of
Part 3.
(2) The Minister may give ASIC
directions about the performance or exercise of its functions or powers under
Part 3.
Part 5Miscellaneous
31 Anti-avoidance measures
(1) If:
(a) before 1 July 2003, a
person entered into an arrangement under which the person provides medical
indemnity cover for a health care professional; and
(b) the sole or dominant purpose,
or a substantial purpose, of the person in entering into the arrangement at that
time was to avoid having a provision or provisions of this Act apply to the
arrangement;
the arrangement is to be treated, for the purposes of this Act, as if it
had been entered into on or after 1 July 2003.
(2) If:
(a) an arrangement under which a
person provides medical indemnity cover for a health care professional comes
into effect before 1 July 2003; and
(b) the sole or dominant purpose,
or a substantial purpose, of the person in having the arrangement come into
effect at that time was to avoid having a provision or provisions of this Act
apply to the arrangement;
the arrangement is to be treated, for the purposes of this Act, as if it
had come into effect on or after 1 July 2003.
(3) If:
(a) an arrangement under which a
person provides medical indemnity cover for a health care professional was
renewed before 1 July 2003; and
(b) the sole or dominant purpose,
or a substantial purpose, of the person in having the arrangement renewed at
that time was to avoid having a provision or provisions of this Act apply to the
arrangement;
the arrangement is to be treated, for the purposes of this Act, as if it
had been renewed on or after 1 July 2003.
32 Act not to affect State and Territory laws
This Act is not intended to exclude or limit the concurrent operation of any law
of a State or Territory.
33 Regulations
(1) The Governor-General may make
regulations prescribing matters:
(a) required or permitted by this
Act to be prescribed; or
(b) necessary or convenient to be
prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.
(2) The regulations may prescribe
penalties not exceeding a fine of 10 penalty units for offences against the
regulations.
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