Weekend Herald

Doctor struck off for false subsidy claims for travellers

- Shannon Pitman Public Interest Journalism, funded through NZ on Air

A doctor who signed up departing British and Australian backpacker­s for long- term healthcare subsidies at her clinic claimed more than $ 420,000 in funding by falsely registerin­g the 2618 patients when they were ineligible.

Now Auckland GP Dr Judith Gill has been struck off by the Health Practition­ers Disciplina­ry Tribunal for misconduct.

Gill owned and operated Queen Street Healthcare ( Auckland Metro Doctors) Ltd and The Travel Clinics ( Travel Care) New Zealand Limited, referred to as AMDT from 2000 to 2011, which received funding for patients from Auckland Primary Health Care ( PHO) ProCare and the then Auckland District Health Board.

Capitation funding is based on the enrolled PHO population, with PHOs and their general practices paid according to the number of people enrolled, not the number of times a provider sees patients.

Charges were initially laid by the Ministry of Health ( MOH) in 2015 but were later withdrawn based on a confidenti­al settlement between the ministry and Gill.

On August 13, 2019, a Profession­al Conduct Committee ( PCC) laid a disciplina­ry charge alleging profession­al misconduct against Gill after a long investigat­ion.

The doctor, who was the sole director and shareholde­r of the clinic, allegedly filled in false informatio­n in order for the patient to be eligible for the funding, according to details of the charge.

Following the investigat­ion into Gill’s practice, the Ministry of Health identified 2618 patients included on her registers who were not eligible for public funding for the health services provided.

To be eligible for the funding, the patients needed to be living in New Zealand and consent to the clinic being their primary healthcare provider.

But the majority of patients applying for the funding through the clinic were travellers from the United Kingdom ( 1772), and Australia.

Of the 2618 not eligible, 194 had not consented to the clinic becoming their primary healthcare provider.

At the tribunal hearing last June a former ProCare worker said if an applicatio­n for funding was successful, the patient would get funded healthcare in New Zealand for three years.

“The doctor was enrolling patients who were about to travel back to their home country.”

Between 2003 and 2011, Gill claimed $ 420,652 for ineligible patients from the public health fund administer­ed by the Auckland DHB, now Te Whatu Ora, under ProCare.

The tribunal hearing for Gill was postponed twice for Covid reasons and three times at the request of Gill with one reason that she wanted to wait until her child was 12 months old.

The tribunal found the charges against the doctor establishe­d, finding her guilty of profession­al misconduct, and malpractic­e which it said discredite­d the medical profession.

In the decision, made in December last year but only released this week, tribunal chairwoman Maria Dew, KC, ordered a formal censure against Gill, the cancellati­on of her registrati­on, and directed her to pay $ 173,837 of the legal costs incurred for the hearing.

 ?? ?? Judith Gill
Judith Gill

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