Major Underpayment Discovered in Australian Private Healthcare Sector
A significant underpayment issue has surfaced within one of Australia’s largest private hospital operators, Healthscope, revealing an estimated $21.7 million in unpaid wages. This affects hundreds of disability service workers and possibly several nurses who may not have received their full entitlements.
Healthscope, a prominent national private hospital operator and
healthcare provider, reported to the Australian Securities and Investments
Commission (ASIC) in April that it had engaged external advisers to thoroughly
investigate the extent of these underpayments.
The company stated in its report, “While this review is ongoing, based
on analysis undertaken during the financial year, Healthscope has recorded
provisions of $21.7 million.”
Operating 38 private hospitals across Australia, Healthscope is
currently addressing two main issues related to staff payments. One involves
historical underpayments affecting 500 current and former employees at
Healthscope Independence Services—a disability support service based in
Victoria. The other concerns the accrual of annual leave for nurses in
hospitals across New South Wales.
Healthscope’s hospitals in New South Wales include the Prince of Wales
Private Hospital, Northern Beaches Hospital, Campbelltown Private Hospital, and
Newcastle Private Hospital. Following its acquisition by Canadian
infrastructure giant Brookfield in 2019, Healthscope has begun making
remediation payments where appropriate.
“In both these instances, we have advised the impacted staff and have
taken steps to resolve the issues as quickly as possible,” said a Healthscope
spokesperson. “These are both historic issues that predate Brookfield’s
acquisition of Healthscope in late 2019.”
This revelation comes at a time when the $22 billion private hospital
sector in Australia is grappling with a financial crisis, driven by soaring
costs and wages alongside declining patient numbers post-pandemic. At least ten
private maternity hospitals have closed since 2017, primarily due to workforce
shortages, with five closures occurring in 2023 alone.
In 2023, Healthscope reported a loss of $648.9 million after writing
down the value of its business by $919 million due to revised expectations of
hospital admissions and operating costs.
The underpayment of staff at Healthscope Independence Services impacted
approximately 200 current and 300 former employees. A spokesperson explained,
“Employees were incorrectly classified in our payroll system, resulting in
historical underpayments. Healthscope has engaged PwC to assist with
identifying affected employees and calculating the remediation payments.”
Remediation payments to current and former staff have been progressively
made, with final payments expected to be completed this quarter. Healthscope
has self-reported the underpayments to the Fair Work Ombudsman, which is
currently investigating the issue.
The spokesperson for the Fair Work Ombudsman stated, “As this matter is
ongoing, it is not appropriate to comment further.”
The other issue involves the accrual of annual leave for nurses in New
South Wales hospitals, arising from complex clauses in the relevant enterprise
agreement. Healthscope is working with the NSW branch of the Australian Nursing
and Midwifery Federation to resolve the matter, which is currently before the
Fair Work Commission.
A spokesperson for the NSW branch of the union declined to comment as
the matter is under consideration by the Fair Work Commission. Meanwhile, the
Health Workers Union, representing some Healthscope workers in private
hospitals and disability care, was unaware of the underpayment issue but
expressed no surprise given Healthscope’s history in the private hospital
sector.
Professor Anthony Scott, a health economics expert from Monash
University, remarked that the underpayment of Healthscope employees adds to the
pressures faced by private hospitals. He highlighted the sector’s challenges,
including workforce shortages, increased wages for healthcare workers, and
reduced uptake of private health insurance amidst a cost-of-living crisis.
In response to these pressures, federal Health Minister Mark Butler
initiated an urgent review of the private hospital sector in June. This review
aims to address skyrocketing costs and intense financial pressures threatening
the sector’s viability, with a report expected by the end of August.
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