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Doctor-Patient Relationship 'At Risk' [AU]

Melissa Jenkins

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A plan giving Medicare bureaucrats access to private patient records will send a shiver down the public's spine, a parliamentary inquiry has been told.

Medicare
Under proposed claim changes, Medicare Australia may require doctors to hand over patient records.

But federal health department officials insist proposed obligations for doctors to justify Medicare claims simply will not allow auditors to paw over patients' sensitive clinical files.

The federal government has released an exposure draft of legislation implementing a crackdown on doctors rorting Medicare.

It announced the compliance audit program, forecast to save $70.3 million over four years, in its last budget and it is due to start on July 1.

Under the changes, Medicare Australia could require doctors to hand over records to substantiate their claims.

If they refuse, they will have to return the Medicare payment received for providing the service and may be fined.

The Australian Medical Association (AMA) has circulated a petition against the proposed changes to GP surgeries for patients to sign.

"If passed, this legislation would have a dark and fundamental impact on the health of this nation," AMA president Rosanna Capolingua told a Senate inquiry into the bill on Wednesday.

"Helping doctors to understand and comply with the increasingly complex system would deliver far greater long-term benefits than sacrificing the privacy of all Australians to catch a handful of doctors and a few honest mistakes."

She said doctors would be forced to hand over patients' confidential medical records to bureaucrats.

Patients would withhold relevant information from their doctors once they learnt their private records could be released, which would compromise their care, Dr Capolingua said.

"If I had a letter saying to me that a Medicare officer is going to be reading my notes, understanding the sort of things that patients have in their notes, some patients could be - you could drive someone to suicide," she said.

Department of Health and Ageing deputy secretary David Learmonth said doctors could provide documents showing consultations and procedures were performed and black-out patient details.

"This is really crunched down to the absolute minimum of what's required to substantiate a claim," he said.

"This is not about bureaucrats pawing over patients' whole files at their leisure."

Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) payments have more than doubled in the past decade. The scheme costs taxpayers more than $13 billion a year.

One in five doctors fail to provide information to substantiate claims when requested by Medicare and currently they are not obliged to do so.

"It's a significant weakness in our capacity to protect public money," Mr Learmonth said.

"It seems somewhat unusual that any funding or benefits program ... enables people to choose whether or not they are audited."

Liberal senator Gary Humphries said the changes would damage the doctor-patient relationship.

"If people knew their records were being checked by bureaucrats and confidential information on those were available to people, I think that they would be horrified.

"Won't that send a shiver down a lot of people's spines?"

Public Interest Advocacy Centre solicitor Peter Dodd said the auditing plan would not erode the doctor-patient relationship.

The draft bill struck the right balance between preserving the integrity of Medicare and the privacy of health records.

Human Services Minister Joe Ludwig said Medicare auditors were bound by the provisions of the Privacy Act.

"This legislation won't give Medicare unfettered access to patient records," he said in a statement.

The inquiry will deliver its report to parliament on June 10.

news.ninemsn.com.au/national/810342/doctor-patient-relationship-at-risk