All Access clinics operating, none of the doctors suspended, Latest Singapore News - The New Paper
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All Access clinics operating, none of the doctors suspended

This article is more than 12 months old

Access Medical will provide own subsidies to Chas patients during suspension

All Access Medical clinics that will be suspended from the Community Health Assist Scheme (Chas) are still operating as normal, and none of the group's doctors have been suspended.

Access Medical, which manages 13 clinics here, will also use its own money to provide subsidies for all its Chas patients for the entire length of the suspension.

The subsidy will likely be around 50 per cent, said the group's founder and managing director Lim Yong Chin yesterday.

Dr Lim said that after audits from the Ministry of Health (MOH) in August last year, steps were taken to ensure claim compliance, such as rectifying "shortcomings" in IT infrastructure and re-educating staff and doctors on the correct way of doing claims.

He added: "We have instituted a claims checking process, where every claim is checked by two people apart from the person who enters the claim."

Dr Lim said: "So far this has been working well for the past 12 months with very much improved compliance to Chas guidelines."

MOH said on Monday that audits of 10 Access Medical clinics "have revealed severe non-compliance".

DOUBTS

While they claimed for government subsidies under Chas, there were doubts over whether all the treatments were actually provided.

The clinics will be suspended from Oct 23 and MOH, which has called in the police, will also be asking the Singapore Medical Council (SMC) to look into the behaviour of some doctors from these clinics.

Dr Lim declined yesterday to reveal the number of Chas claims made through the group's 13 clinics on a monthly basis, as well as the types of Chas claims generally made, citing business confidentiality.

He added: "I have not received any information from any of my doctors about SMC queries."

When approached, an MOH spokesman reiterated the ministry's findings of non-compliant claims through its audits. She said it is not able to comment further on the details of the case given the ongoing police investigations.

Once suspended, clinics cannot make Chas claims for their patients, but they can continue operating and offering their normal services.

The Access Medical clinics that will not be able to make Chas claims from Oct 23 are in Bedok South, Circuit Road, East Coast, Kim Keat, Marine Terrace, Toa Payoh, Whampoa, Jurong West, Redhill Close and Bukit Batok.

MEDICAL & HEALTH