Rise of 13% in CQC fees for 2019/20 confirmed

Rise of 13% in CQC fees for 2019/20 confirmed

Changes to the fees that CQC will charge for the year 2019/20 have now been confirmed and will take effect from 1 April this year. Ian Trenholm, Chief Executive at the Care Quality Commission (CQC) said the rise would “enable us to fulfil our purpose of making sure health and social care services provide people with safe, effective, compassionate and high-quality care.”

The CQC said: “Following consideration of the consultation responses received, the main decisions made on our fees scheme for 2019/20 are as follows.

This scheme ensures we complete our trajectory to full cost recovery for all sectors, as required by HM Treasury. This means that our regulatory costs are paid for by provider fees, and no longer subsidised by grant-in-aid funding from the government.”

But the BDA has condemned the 13% hike in fees for 2019/20, with smaller providers disproportionally bearing more of the cost. They have called on the CQC to explain the rationale for this inflation-busting increase with the regulator consistently reporting that dental practices, when compared with all other sectors, present the lowest risk to patient safety.

They have also questioned why corporates will continue to pay proportionally less per surgery than the average high street provider, as the following examples illustrate. From April:

BDA Chair, Mick Armstrong, said:

“The CQC knows that the profession is delivering safe and high-quality care for our patients so we are perplexed why this year’s fees are linked to such a high backdoor tax. We need to know why the cost for registration, monitoring and inspection processes is so expensive for dentists, how these are divided up and what the regulator is doing to curb these rises.

“The BDA raised these concerns with the CQC in our robust response to the regulator’s consultation on fees but these questions have still not been addressed. We welcome the chance to discuss them further with the CQC in the near future. Dentists are willing to pay our fair share, but not a penny more.

“We also have to ask how it can be fair to smaller providers – the backbone of high street dentistry – to pay more as a percentage of what they earn than corporate providers.”

Link to CQC Fees Scheme:

https://www.cqc.org.uk/sites/default/files/20190326%20Fees_scheme_201920%20fees_FINAL.pdf#page11

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