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HEALTH INSURANCE (PATHOLOGY SERVICES) AMENDMENT BILL 1997

1997

THE PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
















HEALTH INSURANCE (PATHOLOGY SERVICES) AMENDMENT BILL 1997




EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM
















(Circulated by authority of the Minister for Health and Family Services,
the Hon. Dr Michael Wooldridge, MP)


88763  Cat. No. 96 9153 7  ISBN 0644 50448X

HEALTH INSURANCE (PATHOLOGY SERVICES) AMENDMENT BILL 1997

OUTLINE


This Bill is to amend the Health Insurance Act 1973 (“the Act”).

Items 1 to 7 of Schedule 1 seek to allow the payment of Medicare benefits for pathology services when the necessary approvals for pathology providers are overdue for renewal, under certain circumstances.

Under section 16A of the Act, a Medicare benefit cannot be paid for a pathology service unless the service is rendered by or on behalf of an approved pathology practitioner (APP) in an accredited pathology laboratory (APL), and the proprietor of the laboratory was an approved pathology authority (APA). The approval provisions are set out in Part IIA of the Act. In the case of APAs and APPs, acceptance of an undertaking is required before approval is granted. Undertakings are renewed annually upon receipt of an application and a fee. In the case of APLs, approvals are renewed every three years, again upon receipt of an application and a fee.

Sometimes a pathology organisation, inadvertently or because of circumstances beyond its control, fails to submit an application and fee for renewal of one of these approvals
before the current approval has lapsed. In many of these cases, Act of Grace payments have been sought from the Minister for Finance to compensate for the Medicare benefits lost. It is not desirable for payments to continue to be paid as Act of Grace payments, as the administrative processes are cumbersome and not cost efficient.

These amendments would give the Minister for Health and Family Services discretion to backdate approvals, where applications are no more than one month late, allowing Medicare benefits to be paid for services rendered from the commencement of the backdated approval.

The Bill also seeks to strengthen the power of the Health Insurance Commission to enforce the provisions of the Act relating to pathology, thus reducing the level of inappropriate services. It strengthens a provision relating to the licensing scheme for pathology specimen collection centres, to ensure that a notice establishing that it is licensed is clearly visible, thus deterring the operation of unlicensed centres. It removes any ambiguity in a current provision relating to the occupation by a pathology company of premises owned by a medical practitioner or entrepreneur, and will deter arrangements which are forms of inducements to the ordering of pathology services.

Finally, it gives the Commonwealth the power to prescribe penalties for minor pathology offences in regulations which can be enforced by the Health Insurance Commission.

The proposals to strengthen the power of the Health Insurance Commission were developed in consultation with the peak pathology professional bodies, the Australian Association of Pathology Practices (AAPP) and the Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia (RCPA), and have their support.

FINANCIAL IMPACT STATEMENT


The Bill will ensure that Medicare benefit payments are not disrupted in instances that do not warrant it, and that the cost of Act of Grace processes are reduced.

As noted above, the Bill aims to reduce the level of inappropriate pathology activity that imposes costs both on the Commonwealth and the public.


NOTES ON CLAUSES



Clause 1 - Short Title

Specifies the short title of this Act as the Health Insurance (Pathology Services) Amendment Act 1997.

Clause 2 - Commencement

Provides that this Act shall come into operation on the day it receives the Royal Assent.

Clause 3 - Schedules

Provides that the amendments and items in a schedule have effect according to its terms.

Schedule 1 - Amendment of the Health Insurance Act 1973


Item 1

This item amends paragraph 23DC(10A)(a), which provides that the Minister may not specify a day on which a pathology practitioner undertaking comes into force earlier than the day on which it was accepted, to allow the amendments in item 2 to take effect.

Item 2

This item inserts a new section 23DDA.

New subsection 23DDA (1) enables the Minister to backdate an approved pathology provider undertaking to a day earlier than the day on which it was accepted, for a period of up to one month after the previous undertaking has expired. The Minister will have the power to backdate an approval, provided that he/she is satisfied that the reason the undertaking has been submitted past the expiry date is because of a minor clerical oversight on the person's part or circumstances beyond that person's control. The Minister must also be satisfied that the backdating is in the public interest. In addition, the acceptance fee for the undertaking must have been paid.

New subsection 23DDA (2) provides that the earlier day specified in the notice given under subsection 23DC (10) must be the day after the day on which the previous undertaking ceased to be in force.

New subsection 23DDA (3) provides that for the purposes of paragraph (1)(e), but without limiting those matters, the Minister must have regard to whether the person would suffer financial hardship if an earlier day was not specified, and whether substantial inconvenience would be caused to other persons who would not be eligible to receive Medicare benefits for the rendering of professional services if an earlier day was not specified.

The effect of this item is to enable the continued payment of Medicare benefits to providers (and their patients) during a period when they would otherwise be ineligible because a pathology practitioner undertaking has lapsed as a result of a minor oversight .

Item 3

This item amends paragraph 23DF(11A)(a),which provides that the Minister may not specify a day on which a pathology authority undertaking comes into force earlier than the day on which it was accepted, to allow the amendment in item 4 to take effect.

Item 4

This item inserts a new section 23DGA.

New subsection 23DGA (1) enables the Minister to backdate an approved pathology authority undertaking to a day which is earlier than the day on which it was accepted, for a period of up to one month after the previous undertaking has expired. The Minister will have the power to backdate an approval, provided that he/she is satisfied that the reason the undertaking has been submitted past the expiry date is because of a minor clerical oversight on the person's part or circumstances beyond that person's control. The Minister must also be satisfied that the backdating is in the public interest. In addition, the acceptance fee for the undertaking must have been paid.

New subsection 23DGA (2) provides that the earlier day specified in the notice given under subsection 23DF (11) must be the day after the day on which the previous undertaking ceased to be in force.

New subsection 23DGA (3) provides that for the purposes of paragraph (1)(e), but without limiting those matters, the Minister must have regard to whether the person would suffer financial hardship if an earlier day was not specified, and whether substantial inconvenience would be caused to other persons who would not be eligible to receive Medicare benefits for the rendering of professional services if an earlier day was not specified.

The effect of this item is to enable the continued payment of Medicare benefits to providers (and their patients) during a period when they would otherwise be ineligible because a pathology authority undertaking has lapsed as a result of a minor oversight.

Item 5

This item amends paragraph 23DN(4)(a),which provides that approval of an accredited pathology laboratory may not take effect on a day earlier than the one on which the application was received, to allow the amendment in item 6 to take effect.

Item 6

This item inserts a new section after section 23DNA, which determines the principles of accreditation for pathology laboratories.
The intention of new subsection 23DNAAA (1) is to enable the Minister to backdate an accredited pathology laboratory for a period of one month after the previous approval has expired. The Minister will have the power to backdate an approval, provided that he/she is satisfied that the reason the application has been submitted past the expiry date is because of a minor clerical oversight on the person's part or circumstances beyond that person's control. The Minister must also be satisfied that the backdating is in the public interest. In addition, the acceptance fee for the approval must have been paid.

New subsection 23DNAAA (2) provides that the earlier day specified in the approval must be the day after the day on which the previous approval ceased to have effect.

New subsection 23DNAAA (3) provides that for the purposes of paragraph (1)(e), but without limiting those matters, the Minister must have regard to whether the person would suffer financial hardship if an earlier day was not specified, and whether substantial inconvenience would be caused to other persons who would not be eligible to receive Medicare benefit for the rendering of professional services if an earlier day was not specified.

The effect of this item is to enable the continued payment of Medicare benefits to providers (and their patients) during a period when they would otherwise be ineligible because approval of an accredited laboratory has lapsed as a result of a minor oversight.

Item 7

This item is a savings provision. It provides that, where approvals of pathology practitioner undertakings, pathology authority undertakings and laboratory accreditation have been backdated, the Commonwealth waives its right to recover any Medicare benefits paid for services rendered by the pathology practitioners or authorities concerned, or at the laboratories concerned, during the period covered by the backdating before the backdating came into force.

Item 8

This item replaces section 23DNK.

New subsection 23DNK (1) provides that an APA operating a licensed collection centre (LCC) must ensure that a notice is clearly displayed at all times to let the public know that the centre is licensed. If a specimen is collected in an unlicensed collection centre, the consumer is not able to obtain Medicare benefits for tests performed on that specimen. This notice should be clearly visible from outside the LCC to ensure that the public can clearly see whether a centre offering collection services is licensed. It will also allow checking of compliance with the requirements of section 23DNK, without a physical requirement to enter the LCC premises. LCCs often do not operate during normal business hours, but are frequently located within other premises that are open during those hours. Where the premises housing the LCC are open, but the LCC is closed, HIC officers are not able to enter the LCC to check compliance.

The penalty for not displaying a notice is increased from $100 to $1000. It is intended that the external display requirement will have a deterrent effect on breaches of 23DNK, and will enable consumers to be aware of the licensing arrangements required to obtain Medicare benefits.

New subsection 23DNK allows for circumstances where it is not possible for an APA to comply because of a lawful arrangement such as a tenancy agreement. The obligation must have been in force at the time this Act commenced.

Item 9

This item inserts new subsections (2C) and (2D) after subsection 23DO(2B) to provide that a person, who unsuccessfully applied for backdating of approval of an undertaking or of laboratory accreditation, may apply to the Minister for reconsideration of that decision.

Item 10

This item amends subsection 23DO(3) to provide that the Minister must advise the applicant in writing of his/her decision on the reconsideration of backdating of an approval.

Item 11

This item amends paragraph 23DO(5)(c) to provide that a person who has unsuccessfully appealed to the Minister for a review of a decision not to backdate an approval may appeal to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal.

Item 12

This item seeks to strengthen section 129AAA, which provides that an APP must not enter into an arrangement with a practitioner or medical entrepreneur for the use or occupation of premises by the APP unless it is for the purpose of establishing an LCC or accredited pathology laboratory or where the APP renders professional services in the premises. This clause makes it clear that, if premises are occupied by an APP, that APP must use them to render professional services personally.

The intention of the amendment is to prevent arrangements where the APP merely oversees the use of the premises through agents or employees, and where the purpose of the arrangement is to provide inducements or kickbacks to a medical practitioner or entrepreneur in the form of rent or to operate an unlicensed collection centre.

Item 13

This item amends section 133 of the Act to allow the Commonwealth to make regulations which prescribe penalties for minor pathology offences.

This amendment will enable regulations to be made to allow the Health Insurance Commission (HIC) to deal more efficiently and expeditiously with the less serious infringements relating to pathology. An example of the type of breach that would fall into this system includes the failure by APAs to advise the public that a pathology laboratory is no longer approved and that the services rendered there do not attract Medicare benefits.

It is anticipated that the system will result in a higher level of compliance with the legislative provisions for pathology.

 


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