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Senator raises ‘distressing’ impact of controversial Medicare fraud reports


Jolyon Attwooll


11/11/2022 4:44:02 PM

Recent Medicare fraud and non-compliance claims have been roundly rejected by public officials and politicians in a Senate Estimates hearing at Parliament House.

Senator Anne Ruston
Senator Anne Ruston raised the 'very concerning' impact the recent reporting on Medicare compliance has had on GPs. (Image: AAP)

Health officials were asked this week if adequate measures are in place to address the ‘significant impact’ of recent media coverage on an already beleaguered GP workforce.
 
South Australian Senator Anne Ruston raised the issue at a Senate Estimates hearing on Thursday, addressing several executives from the Department of Health and Aged Care (DoH) about the fiercely contested Medicare rorts and fraud coverage in Nine Newspapers and the ABC.
 
Referencing the coverage’s effect on medical practitioners, particularly GPs, Senator Ruston inquired whether the DoH had received similar feedback about the ‘extremely distressing’ nature of the findings for many those involved in general practice.
 
‘We’ve heard, anecdotally at least, that we’ve had practitioners that are resigning or considering resigning or retiring as a result of this,’ she said. ‘Have you had advice to that effect as well?’
 
The Senator also asked a panel, which included DoH Secretary Professor Brendan Murphy, whether the department has moved to ‘alleviate this level of anxiety and concern’ and convey to doctors their view that the allegation of $8 billion in fraud and non-compliant Medicare claims is unfounded.
 
In response, Professor Murphy referenced a recent statement from Federal Health and Aged Care Minister Mark Butler that the department had found ‘no evidence to support the scale of the fraud’.
 
In fact, during the hearing, the spotlight focused several times on the headline claims of $8 billion worth of annual Medicare ‘rorts’ and non-compliance.
 
Different officials gave their take as to why the figure remains unsubstantiated.
 
Dr Margaret Faux, a health system lawyer whose PhD focused on Medicare, was the main source behind the 7.30 program’s $8 billion non-compliance claims.
 
Professor Murphy said his colleague Daniel McCabe, the DoH’s First Assistant Secretary for Benefits Integrity and Digital Health who also appeared at the hearing, had met with Dr Faux prior to the recent reporting.
 
‘We do accept that [with] a program the size of Medicare, there are elements of fraud, there are elements of billing errors, and there are elements of over-servicing,’ Professor Murphy said.
 
‘[But] we have not found any evidence to support the size of the claim that was made in the media, the $8 billion claim of fraud and billing errors.’  
 
Professor Murphy also said Mr McCabe ‘has a team of 350 people working on that issue’, adding that the thesis has already been carefully examined.
 
‘It’s essentially an assertion not backed by any evidence that we’ve seen,’ he reiterated.
 
Speaking subsequently, Mr McCabe said Dr Faux’s PhD references a Medicare non-compliance figure ranging from $1.5–3 billion, and that the research suggested most of that related to doctors not understanding how to use the system.
 
‘So, the narrative in the media is quite different to what’s actually in the PhD,’ he said.
 
Mr McCabe also alluded to a previous estimate by the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO), which cites $366 million – $2.2 billion as the range of potential non-compliant Medicare claiming.
 
‘I guess an element of that … could include inappropriate practice and at a very … high end in terms of concern, there would be some fraud in that number as well.’
 
The DoH’s Penny Shakespeare, Deputy Secretary of the Health Resourcing Group, added further context by explaining that the large range of the estimate is due to the input of different consulting groups.
 
She also offered an insight into the wider approach towards Medicare compliance and expressed scepticism about the inference that fraud is the dominant root cause of non-compliance.
 
‘In terms of the department’s work, we have an ongoing program of compliance,’ she said.
 
‘It’s probably quite similar to other public regular regulatory functions in that we apply a regulator pyramid approach.
 
‘We think most of the inaccurate billing is not deliberate, it’s mistakes.’
 
Professor Murphy acknowledged that ‘public confidence potentially has been affected by these media claims’, which he said was the reason behind Minister Butler’s decision to commission a further review by a health economist into the compliance system.
 
That decision was announced on Monday, with health economist Dr Pradeep Philip tasked with investigating Medicare’s integrity and compliance mechanisms. The Philip Review, as it is being called, is due to be submitted by the end of February 2023.
 
Mr McCabe offered the hearing some context to that decision.
 
‘As part of that review, we’re going to have a look not just at the compliance program, but are there any issues up front in Medicare that might need tightening up in terms of how it’s used,’ he said.
 
‘[We will also be] looking at the integrity of all the payment channels to make sure that if there are any potential gaps that they’re closed.’
 
Mr McCabe also said he differs on the presentation in some media reports which have queried the Government’s capacity to detect fraud.
 
‘I disagree with those media claims,’ he said, adding that there had been a number of cases that had been successfully taken up.
 
‘Last financial year, we dealt with upwards of 16 matters before the court which resulted in over $24 million worth of matters … being prosecuted,’ he said.
 
Wrapping up the discussion, Senator Ruston again referenced the impact of the recent reports on general practice.
 
‘It’s just obviously very concerning when we’ve got the GP crisis that we have at the moment, that we’ve got a situation where our GPs are under threat,’ she said.  
 
The hearing can be watched in full on the Parliament House website, with the Medicare discussion starting at around 17:15.
 
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Dr Judith Alison Ridd   12/11/2022 7:07:44 AM

Clearly most GPs are underpaid by the medicare system and work hard for much less remuneration than their specialist colleagues. This widely publicised media coverage has led to further disillusionment. I myself have left regular GP work in the last 3months. I am at a loss to understand why this unsubstantiated piece of work led to so much coverage when the chronic lack of increase in basic MC payments has not been mentioned once.


Dr Dhara Prathmesh Contractor   12/11/2022 8:04:03 AM

All practitioners understand the facts, but defamed on national television. With full Pre advertising agenda prior to the show. We just need statement to channels to compensate for the defamation.
Or compensate by putting together a 5 minute advertising for 6 months on how the General Practice in Australia has stood the odds of pandemic, looked after the community, tried adjusting with ever changing Medicare item numbers on almost fortnightly basis over the pandemic.
And how 99% GP are not thinking of billings only when it comes to achieving the best outcomes for their patients. And don’t think about minutes and time of the day and assure that continuity of care is maintained for their patients.
Telehealth in rural population with limited to no practitioners is sensible. Telehealth in metro for non COVID19 infected patients is a real burden, fulfilling demands of the people.
Pop up companies giving online scripts and Telehealth consultations? Regulations?


Shelley   12/11/2022 10:42:09 AM

Any repercussions for false reporting in the media, or the unsubstantiated claims from faux?


Dr Raafat Roushdi Soliman   12/11/2022 1:52:12 PM

‘We’ve heard, anecdotally at least, that we’ve had practitioners that are resigning or considering resigning or retiring as a result of this,’ she said. ‘Have you had advice to that effect as well?’
I strongly believe that what you have heard was right specially after the new add on AHPRA very complex post covid CPD guidelines to continue registration !


Dr Maureen Anne Fitzsimon   12/11/2022 2:10:26 PM

If only Senator Ruston had given a tiny bit of support to general practice when her party were in government!


Rural GP   12/11/2022 2:54:03 PM

Thankyou Senator Rushton. I feel very differently about my job now. I am disillusioned/ disheartened. Of course this was a cynical political manoeuvre to sabotage GP's trying to get some movement on MBS. We hold a position of trust with our patient if not with the government, but it being purposefully undermined. Like being told "You dont know how t interpret an ECG . The labor party does it every election cycle : bash GP's! Did this really strengthen Medicare?
So I am now more likely to private bill, I am withdrawing to treat patients who value my service and I will provide less service for the government ( BB) who have abused that trust. When A+E's get swamped, they can only blame themselves. We were the free alternative for the most needy. Sad to say, we are all diminished by these lies and now mistrust.


Dr Penelope Ann Martin   12/11/2022 3:46:23 PM

Can the damage to GP morale be undone?


Dr Lynette Dorothy Allen   13/11/2022 6:09:49 PM

Faux means fake or false - surely the media should have looked further than swallowing this media release at face value and further demoralising the majority of honest hard working doctors. In my 36 years of running my own business I privately billed everyone to avoid being accused of defrauding Medicare.