Audit finds half of claims unsupported
By
Theresa Boyle
In the latest volley in the war between the
province and physiotherapists, the health ministry is going after
private clinics to recoup money it argues they wrongly billed OHIP.
Letters aimed at recovering $104,600 were
couriered to 45 clinics Wednesday after a three-month OHIP audit found
more than half of the records did not support claims, according to
records the Toronto Star obtained.
The province is looking at expanding the
audit to cover a longer period of time, more clinics and records
involving more services.
The recovery letters were sent a day before the clinics take the province to court in an attempt to quash a regulation that would stop them from billing OHIP as of Aug. 1.
The 2011 OHIP audit uncovered evidence
Ontario is using to bolster its reform case. There is a suggestion the
old system was vulnerable to abuse and became a cash cow for some
clinics.
"There is extraordinary growth in
expenditures and the audit was one of those factors that just
demonstrated to me there were companies taking advantage of the way the
program was set out and taking advantage of their unlimited ability to
bill OHIP," Health Minister Deb Matthews said.
The province is overhauling the way it funds
physiotherapy, taking away the authority of 91 clinics to bill OHIP, a
practice that dates back to the 1960s.
The move has raised the hackles of the
clinics, which have a lot at stake. They made $172 million in OHIP
billings in 2011-2012 and are projected to pull in $200 million in the
current fiscal year.
The audit looked at almost 15,000 records
from the clinics and found that 58 per cent of them failed to support
OHIP billings. It looked only at billings for in-home physiotherapy
provided mainly to seniors living in settings such as retirement homes.
Documents show that in many cases OHIP was
billed for physiotherapy when what was actually delivered was group
exercise classes, often led by non-physiotherapists. Care plans were
deemed substandard, record keeping was incomplete and appropriate
physician referrals lacking.
The audit also found cases where OHIP was
billed for what was described as "individual exercise programs" that
lasted only five minutes and were delivered three times a week by
non-physiotherapists.
Told about the audit results and ministry
recovery plans in an interview, Tony Melles, spokesperson for the
Designated Physiotherapy Clinics Association of Ontario, said it was the
first he had heard of it. He said he had no qualms about the province
clawing back money it believes was improperly billed, but wishes the
clinics had been informed about what was happening.
Melles, who is also president of Achieva
Health, which owns and operates a number of the affected clinics, argued
that the province is making a mistake and warned that patients will
suffer.
"I can't figure out for the life of me how
you can take that much money out of the system. (It) means we are going
to have to let go staff …. Less physiotherapists, less physiotherapy
assistants translates into less treatment," he said, noting clinics are
in the midst of laying off 3,000 employees.
Though the province maintains it is
increasing the physiotherapy budget by $10 million, Melles argues it is
actually cutting funding by far more than that since the clinics have
been billing OHIP for more than they were budgeted for in recent years.
The new system will see provincially-funded
physiotherapy offered in 200 clinics that will be more equally
distributed across Ontario. The 91 existing clinics can still provide
physio, but the OHIP-billing model will be replaced with one that
involves transfer payment agreements with the health ministry.
Provincially-funded physiotherapy will also
be offered through home care, long-term care and primary care. As well,
exercise classes for seniors will continue to be offered in retirement
homes and community settings.
Matthews noted that the Ontario
Physiotherapy Association is onside with the changes and it's only the
clinics that are digging in their heels.
"When you do something like this, you know
that those who have benefitted from the old model are going to invest
very heavily in trying to put pressure on us not to make that change and
that is exactly what's happening. That's what the pharmacists did,
that's what the OMA did," she said referring measures taken by the
province to lower the amount it pays for generic drugs and for some
medical procedures.
Torstar News
Source: http://www.thespec.com/news-story/3907725-ontario-going-after-physio-clinics-to-recoup-money/
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