“Whoever controls the volume of money in our country is the absolute master of all industry and commerce.” - James A. Garfield, 20th President of the United States of America
Health insurance funds in Australia pay in the vicinity of $2 billion towards dental services annually1. An intrinsic part of the way dental services are funded in this country, insurance monies do come with strings attached: Put simply, health funds hold the money, they pay out the money, and they prescribe terms and conditions on which that money is paid out.
The health funds would not be meeting their responsibilities if they didn’t do business with a degree of rigour. But for dentists – like any ancillary provider – this means not just having to comply to receive funding, but also the possibility of being audited for compliance after the fact.
Audit by a health fund can sometimes come as a surprise – even an imposition – to a dentist who has carefully treatment planned, completed work for a patient, and settled their account.
The fund’s right to audit and take other measures to ensure compliance with fund requirements, has contract at its core. Exact legal rights and responsibilities will be heavily dependent on the health fund you are dealing with, and the agreements, arrangements, and course of conduct (if any) you have developed with them. There are, however, some typical features found in the terms and conditions of common health funds.
It is more likely than not, that if you receive funds from a health fund, they will have carefully ensured for themselves the right to audit you from time to time – and recoup wrongly paid monies – so that everything runs as it should, for the benefit of their members.
You might be the owner of a practice that has entered into an agreement with a health fund. This is the most straightforward scenario: Consult the agreement you signed, to understand the fund’s audit rights, and your obligations in respect of the same.
A related but different scenario is that you might be a dentist who works at a practice that has an agreement with a health fund. You may not have signed anything personally. In this situation, enquire after something termed a ‘Dental Provider Agreement’ or similar, entered into at a practice level.
Another scenario is that you may be a dentist who has never signed an agreement with a health fund, and whose practice has not signed an agreement with a health fund.
If you have never seen, or even been notified of, a health fund’s terms and conditions, and your practice does not have an agreement with the fund, it is conceivable you might be able to refute the existence of a contract (or particular terms). This would require specific advice; and in any case, whilst it might be a strategy of some use regarding past payments, it is unlikely that you could continue to reject a fund’s terms and conditions on the one hand and continue receiving benefits from them on the other.
The answer here depends on the health fund in question, and the nature of the agreement(s) with them. Assuming you have identified a relevant agreement or agreements, look for a framework of provisions resembling the following:
The sometimes-fraught relationship between dentists and health funds is not lost on us. Recall campaigns such as ‘Time2Switch’2, and statements such as the following3: ‘While its role in providing rebates for dental, medical, and other services such as physiotherapy and optometry is now accepted as a standard part of modern practice, private health insurance is also responsible for causing problems for consumers and dental professionals alike with its lack of policy transparency and hard-to-understand rebate procedures’.
Be this as it may, in simple terms, to successfully sue another party, you need to identify a cause of action – a legal wrong, or facts giving you the right to seek relief through the courts. If you have an agreement with (or are covered by the terms of an agreement with) a health fund, and they are correctly applying the terms of that agreement to audit you, then you are likely to struggle to find a compelling cause of action.
We stress that this is necessarily a general discussion only. Legal rights and obligations will always depend on the specific terms of contract between health fund and practice/practitioner, and between practice and practitioner.
There are also invariably other rules and requirements to be aware of, and follow, such as:
Like all legal questions, you should therefore seek specific advice if you want to understand your own circumstances.
1Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (2022) ‘Oral health and dental care in Australia’, AIHW, Australian Government, https://www.aihw.gov.au/reports/den/231/oral-health-and-dental-care-in-australia/contents/costs.
2‘Time2Switch’: https://www.teeth.org.au/time2switch/Home.
3‘Time2Switch. Redefining the relationship with private health insurance’, https://www.ada.org.au/News-Media/News-and-Release/Latest-News/Time2Switch-Redefining-the-relationship-with-priv
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