From 799ea4264fe66f992085f226ebde22cb9a928b56 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Blog Creator Date: Wed, 11 Mar 2026 00:46:20 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Add timeline of health-super interaction --- ..._interact_to_create_bad_outcomes_part_1.md | 191 +++++++----------- 1 file changed, 72 insertions(+), 119 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/content/how_legal_systems_interact_to_create_bad_outcomes_part_1.md b/src/content/how_legal_systems_interact_to_create_bad_outcomes_part_1.md index 3a1ee2d..39ae246 100644 --- a/src/content/how_legal_systems_interact_to_create_bad_outcomes_part_1.md +++ b/src/content/how_legal_systems_interact_to_create_bad_outcomes_part_1.md @@ -1,153 +1,106 @@ -**How Legal Systems Interact To Create Bad Outcomes – Part 1** +## Introduction + +I am a policy analyst and a parent. When my daughter suffered a serious knee injury last year, the medical emergency was clear, but the bureaucratic maze that followed was anything but. The story I am about to tell is not a complaint about a single clerk or a one‑off mistake. It is a factual record of how three distinct government ecosystems—Australia’s health system, the superannuation early‑release regime, and the income‑tested human‑services framework—collide and generate outcomes that are far from the compassionate intent behind each policy. + +The purpose of this post is to lay out, in chronological order, the events that forced us to navigate those systems. I am not offering solutions or a final analysis here; those will appear in later installments. What you will find is a plain‑spoken timeline, a description of the interfaces between the systems, and a brief note on the administrative review process that we ultimately chose not to pursue because of its prohibitive cost and complexity. --- -### 1. Why I’m Writing This +## The three systems at play -I normally keep my blog posts short and factual, but the experience I have just been through is anything but brief. It is a story that illustrates how three separate government portfolios—health, superannuation, and taxation—can collide and leave a family shouldering a burden that none of the policies were designed to impose. +| System | Primary function | How it intersected with the others | +|--------|------------------|------------------------------------| +| **Private / Public Health** | Provides (or delays) medical treatment. | The long public‑wait forced us into private care, creating a sizable out‑of‑pocket bill that needed funding. | +| **ATO & Superannuation** | Holds retirement savings and governs early‑release on compassionate grounds. | We accessed super to pay the private‑care gap, turning a health expense into taxable income. | +| **Child‑care subsidy & Human Services** | Determines eligibility for income‑tested benefits. | The super withdrawal appears as income, influencing the means‑test used for subsidies and other supports. | -The purpose of this post is **not** to offer solutions or to debate the merits of any legislation. It is simply to lay out, in chronological order, the facts that created the problem. By mapping each trigger point, the next two installments can focus on how the system reacts and, ultimately, why the label “compassionate” feels like a misnomer. +These ecosystems are linked by shared data (myGov, TFN, Medicare records) and by policy rules that were drafted in isolation. The result is a cascade of unintended consequences that I will illustrate through the timeline below. --- -### 2. The Core Issue in One Sentence +## Timeline of events -A child needed urgent knee surgery. Public hospital queues would have added a 12‑ to 24‑month wait; private care was affordable only after tapping retirement savings through the Compassionate Release of Superannuation (CRS) scheme—an avenue that later proved to be taxed as ordinary income. +### June 2024 – The injury and the first system failure + +- **Incident at school** – My daughter twisted her knee during a rugby drill. We rushed her to the nearest emergency department. The staff stabilised the injury, applied a splint, and sent us back to our general practitioner for follow‑up. +- **GP’s assessment of pathways** – The GP explained that the injury required specialist review and almost certainly surgery. In the public system, the expected wait for an orthopaedic appointment was **12–24 months**. Adding the usual post‑surgical rehabilitation would push the total recovery well beyond two years. +- **Why this matters** – For a growing adolescent, such a delay is not a minor inconvenience; it raises the risk of muscle atrophy, altered gait, secondary joint damage, and psychological distress. The public system’s triage, in effect, sanctioned a deterioration of health rather than a timely cure. +- **Decision to go private** – Faced with a timeline that would jeopardise my daughter’s long‑term health, we elected to seek private treatment. We researched specialists and identified a well‑known orthopaedic surgeon near our home who routinely treats paediatric sports injuries. + +### July 2024 – The financial reality of private care + +- **Specialist consultation and diagnosis** – The surgeon confirmed the need for arthroscopic reconstruction and provided a detailed fee schedule. +- **Breakdown of costs** + - Medicare rebate: ≈ AU$1 000 (covers a small portion of the surgeon’s professional fee). + - Surgeon’s fee: ≈ AU$6 000. + - Anaesthetist’s fee: ≈ AU$1 500. + - Additional theatre and incidental expenses (not covered by private health insurance). +- **Private health insurance coverage** – Our policy covered the hospital accommodation and the bulk of the theatre costs, which would otherwise have added tens of thousands of dollars to the bill. +- **Gap‑cover inquiry** – We asked whether the surgeon participated in a “no‑gap” arrangement with our insurer (a scheme where the doctor limits charges to the insurer’s scheduled benefit). The surgeon declined, explaining that such arrangements would leave her under‑compensated for professional indemnity, overheads, and the specialised nature of the procedure. +- **Resulting financial gap** – After the Medicare rebate and insurance contribution, we still needed roughly **AU$8 000** to settle the professional fees. +- **Exploring early super release** – Remembering the compassionate‑release provision, I examined the ATO’s guidelines, calculated the tax withholding, and compared the net cost to a high‑interest personal loan. The super route was financially preferable, despite the tax implications. + +### August 2024 – Accessing super and the surgery + +- **Application for compassionate release** – I compiled the required medical reports, invoices, and supporting documentation, then submitted the online application through myGov. The process demanded precise, up‑to‑date evidence and a clear statement of the medical necessity. +- **Approval and fund transfer** – Within the ATO’s standard processing window, the application was approved. The super fund deducted the applicable tax and released the lump sum to my bank account. +- **Surgery performed** – The operation proceeded as scheduled. The specialist’s invoice was paid in full using the released super funds. The clinical outcome was excellent; the surgeon was transparent, professional, and delivered the expected result. + +### October 2024 – Rehabilitation begins + +- **Physiotherapy schedule** – Post‑operative physiotherapy commenced promptly. Because the surgery occurred within weeks of the injury, the rehabilitation timeline aligned with the typical recovery window for a young athlete, preserving muscle strength and joint function. + +### November 2024 – First tax return (2023/24) + +- **Lodgement** – I filed the 2023/24 income tax return with my accountant. The super withdrawal occurred in the following financial year (2024/25), so it did not appear on this return. The filing was routine, with no flags or unexpected liabilities. + +### April 2025 – Return to sport (training phase) + +- **Rugby season** – My daughter was cleared to participate in training sessions, though not yet in competitive matches. This level of involvement would have been impossible had we remained in the public system, where the surgery would still have been pending. +- **Implications** – The timely private treatment preserved not only her physical health but also her social connections, confidence, and future sporting prospects. --- -### 3. Background: The Health‑System Choice +## How the systems began to interact -In Australia, families confronting a serious injury must decide between two very different pathways: +At the moment the surgery was paid for, the three ecosystems started to exchange data in ways that were never intended to be linked: -| **Public pathway** | **Private pathway** | -|-------------------|---------------------| -| No upfront out‑of‑pocket fees (apart from Medicare levy) | Immediate access to specialist care, but significant gaps not covered by insurance | -| Long triage periods for non‑emergency orthopaedic surgery | Shorter waiting times, but the patient bears the “gap” after Medicare and private‑health rebates | -| Funded by the Commonwealth, but often over‑stretched | Funded by private insurers and individual premiums; providers may opt out of gap‑cover arrangements | +1. **Super release recorded as taxable income** – The ATO treats the lump‑sum withdrawal as a taxable component. The super fund issues a payment summary showing the gross amount and the tax withheld. +2. **Taxable income feeds into means‑testing** – Human Services (which administers the Child Care Subsidy and other family supports) uses the ATO’s income data to assess eligibility. The super withdrawal, although spent immediately on medical fees, appears as additional assessable income for the 2024/25 year. +3. **Health system sees the bill as settled** – From the hospital and surgeon’s perspective, the invoice is paid in full; there is no ongoing financial liability. However, the downstream effects on tax and subsidy eligibility are invisible to the health providers. -The decision point is where the first friction appears. +The lack of a mechanism to flag that the income arose from a compulsory medical expense means the system treats the withdrawal as discretionary cash, potentially reducing the family’s entitlement to income‑tested benefits. This misalignment is the core of the adverse outcome we are now confronting. --- -### 4. Chronological Timeline of Events +## The Administrative Review Tribunal – a barrier in practice -#### **June 2024 – The Injury and the First Decision** +After the super release was reflected in our tax assessment, we received a notice that our Child Care Subsidy eligibility had been reduced. We sought clarification from the relevant department, which responded with a generic explanation that the reduction was due to an increase in assessable income. -| Date | Event | Immediate consequence | -|------|-------|-----------------------| -| Early June | My daughter suffered a knee injury at school; an emergency department splinted the joint and sent us back to our GP. | The injury was stabilised, but further treatment was required. | -| Mid‑June | The GP explained that, in the public system, a knee reconstruction for a child could be triaged anywhere between **12 and 24 months**. | A wait of that length would have meant a second, prolonged recovery phase, increasing the risk of chronic pain, reduced mobility, and long‑term dependence on health services. | -| Late June | After weighing the medical risks, we elected the **private** route and began searching for a specialist orthopaedic surgeon with expertise in paediatric knee injuries. | The decision shifted the burden from a waiting list to a financial one. | +We then applied to the Administrative Review Tribunal (ART) for a review of the decision. The experience highlighted three structural obstacles: -*Key failure point:* The public system’s triage policy, designed to manage limited resources, inadvertently creates a scenario where delaying treatment can generate greater downstream costs—both health‑wise and financially. +- **Invasive evidence requirements** – The ART demanded exhaustive financial disclosure, including bank statements, detailed receipts, and a full audit trail of the super application. +- **High cost of representation** – Engaging a qualified legal practitioner to navigate the tribunal’s procedural rules was financially burdensome, especially after already spending a substantial sum on the surgery. +- **Lengthy timeline** – The tribunal process can extend for many months, during which the reduced subsidy continues to affect cash flow, effectively penalising families while they wait for a decision. -#### **July 2024 – Cost Disclosure and the Gap Dilemma** - -| Date | Event | Immediate consequence | -|------|-------|-----------------------| -| Early July | The chosen specialist provided a detailed fee schedule and asked us to sign an **informed financial consent**. | We were now fully aware of the out‑of‑pocket obligations. | -| Mid‑July | After the standard Medicare rebate (≈ $1,000), the remaining **surgeon gap** was **≈ $6,000**, plus **$1,500** for the anaesthetist. Other theatre costs were covered by our private‑health insurer. | The total gap to be paid out of pocket was roughly **$7,500**. | -| Mid‑July | We asked whether the surgeon would participate in the **gap‑cover scheme** (a voluntary arrangement where insurers reimburse part of the doctor’s gap). The surgeon declined, stating that the scheme would reduce her remuneration to a level that barely covered her operating costs. | Even with private‑health insurance, the gap remained our responsibility. | -| Late July | Recognising that both public and private pathways left us with a sizable bill, we explored the **Compassionate Release of Superannuation** (CRS) as an alternative to a personal loan. | The CRS route required a substantial paperwork effort but promised a lower overall cost than a high‑interest loan. | - -*Key failure point:* The optional nature of gap‑cover leaves patients exposed to large out‑of‑pocket expenses, despite paying regular private‑health premiums. - -#### **July 2024 – Applying for Compassionate Super Release** - -| Step | Action | Outcome | -|------|--------|----------| -| Research | Reviewed ATO guidance on compassionate super release, confirming that medical treatment for a dependant qualifies. | Established eligibility criteria and evidence requirements. | -| Documentation | Collected medical reports, specialist invoices, proof of dependency, and a signed financial consent. | Assembled a dossier meeting the ATO’s strict checklist. | -| Submission | Completed the online application via myGov, attached all supporting files, and submitted the request. | Received an acknowledgement receipt within 24 hours. | -| Approval | After a short processing period, the ATO approved the release of **≈ $8,000**. | Funds were transferred to our super fund, ready for withdrawal. | - -The application demanded **several hours** of work, effectively turning the family into a case manager for three separate government agencies. - -#### **August 2024 – Surgery and Payment** - -| Date | Event | Immediate consequence | -|------|-------|-----------------------| -| Early August | My daughter underwent the knee reconstruction performed by the specialist surgeon. | The medical issue was addressed within the required timeframe. | -| Mid‑August | The surgeon’s invoice and the anaesthetist’s fee were settled using the released super funds. | The out‑of‑pocket gap was cleared without resorting to a loan. | - -The surgery’s success hinged on the timely private‑health pathway; the public queue would still have been open. - -#### **October 2024 – Rehabilitation Begins** - -| Date | Event | Immediate consequence | -|------|-------|-----------------------| -| Early October | A structured physiotherapy program started, focusing on restoring range of motion and strength. | The child progressed toward full functional recovery, aligning with the upcoming sports season. | - -#### **November 2024 – First Tax Return** - -| Date | Event | Immediate consequence | -|------|-------|-----------------------| -| Late November | Our 2023/24 tax return was lodged with the assistance of an accountant. The CRS withdrawal **did not appear** on the return because the release occurred after the fiscal year ended. | No immediate tax impact was recorded; the family’s cash flow remained stable. | - -#### **April 2025 – Return to Sport (Partial)** - -| Date | Event | Immediate consequence | -|------|-------|-----------------------| -| Early April | My daughter joined the training squad for the 2025 rugby season. She could not yet play competitively but was able to train. | The early surgery prevented a complete loss of the season, which would have occurred had we waited for public‑system surgery. | +Faced with these hurdles, we elected not to pursue the review further. The decision was not an admission of error; rather, it reflected the reality that the system’s design often forces citizens to exhaust themselves before achieving any meaningful redress. --- -### 5. What the Timeline Reveals +## What this post does not cover -1. **Health‑system triage creates a forced financial decision.** - The public pathway’s 12‑ to 24‑month wait forced us into private care, where the cost structure is opaque and can be prohibitive. - -2. **Private‑health gap policies are optional and uneven.** - When a specialist opts out of gap‑cover, the patient bears the full gap despite holding private‑health insurance. The system offers no safety net for such scenarios. - -3. **Compassionate super release is a bureaucratic bridge, not a safety net.** - The CRS mechanism works, but only after the applicant supplies a mountain of documentation, effectively turning the family into a multi‑agency liaison. The process is time‑consuming and emotionally draining. - -4. **Tax treatment of the CRS withdrawal adds a hidden cost.** - Although the withdrawal was not reflected in the 2023/24 return, the amount will be treated as assessable income in the **2024/25** tax year, meaning the family will face a tax liability on money that was used for essential medical care. - -5. **The cumulative effect is a net financial loss despite a positive health outcome.** - The child’s knee healed, but the family’s retirement savings were reduced, and a future tax bill looms—an outcome none of the three portfolios intended. +- **Medical criticism** – The surgeon’s care was exemplary; the clinical outcome was successful. This narrative is not a critique of any health professional. +- **Policy solutions** – I will reserve any recommendations for the final analysis in Part 3 of this series. +- **Technical code examples** – The focus is on policy and process, not on software implementation. --- -### 6. The Bureaucratic Response (A Glimpse) +## Looking ahead -After the surgery, we reached out to the relevant departments seeking a review of the process. The replies we received were: +The timeline above ends with the surgery paid and the rehabilitation underway. The next post will trace the subsequent tax filing for the 2024/25 financial year, the exact point at which the super withdrawal is entered into the ATO’s system, and how that data propagates to Human Services, triggering the reduction in income‑tested benefits. -* **Generic and non‑specific.** A canned email addressed only the surface question, ignoring the interaction between health triage, gap‑cover, and CRS. -* **Invasive in tone.** The correspondence implied that we had not done sufficient research, shifting the burden of proof back onto us. -* **Costly in time.** Each request for clarification required additional documentation, extending the administrative load. - -These responses illustrate a siloed approach: each portfolio defends its own rules without acknowledging the compounded impact on citizens. +By documenting each trigger, I hope to make visible the hidden “triangle” formed by health, super, and human‑services policies—a triangle that, for many families, produces a net negative outcome despite each side being designed with good intentions. --- -### 7. Setting the Stage for Parts 2 & 3 - -The timeline above establishes **trigger points** that will become active as the 2024/25 tax return is processed: - -| Trigger | When it fires | Expected effect | -|---------|----------------|-----------------| -| **CRS tax withholding** | During the 2024/25 tax assessment | The released amount is taxed as ordinary income, reducing net benefit. | -| **Super‑fund payment summary** | After the fund releases the lump sum | The summary must be manually entered into the tax return, increasing the chance of error. | -| **Potential ATO audit** | If the withdrawal is flagged for review | Additional paperwork may be required, extending the administrative burden. | - -Part 2 will dissect each of these triggers, showing how the ATO’s classification of the compassionate release interacts with the medical expense. Part 3 will synthesize the findings, demonstrate the systemic friction, and finally propose concrete policy adjustments. - ---- - -### 8. Conclusion of Part 1 - -The facts are now laid out: - -* A serious paediatric injury required timely surgery. -* Public‑system triage forced a private‑health route, exposing the family to a sizeable gap. -* The specialist’s refusal to join the gap‑cover scheme left the gap entirely uncovered by insurance. -* Accessing retirement savings through the Compassionate Release of Superannuation solved the immediate cash problem but introduced a future tax liability. -* Bureaucratic replies have been generic, siloed, and demanding further effort from the family. - -The health outcome was positive—my daughter is on the road to full recovery. Yet the financial and administrative journey highlights a stark mismatch between the **intention** of “compassionate” policies and their **real‑world** impact. - -The next post will reveal how the tax system treats the released super as assessable income, and the final post will tie together the three portfolios to illustrate why the current design produces an unjust outcome. Until then, the timeline stands as a record of what actually happens when government systems intersect in the lives of ordinary Australians. \ No newline at end of file +*End of Part 1 – Timeline and system overview.* \ No newline at end of file