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Part 7E+WPharmaceutical services and local pharmaceutical services

Chapter 6E+WDisqualification

151Disqualification of practitionersE+W

(1)If it appears to a Primary Care Trust that any of the conditions set out in subsections (2) to (4) is established in relation to a person included in a pharmaceutical list it may (or, in cases falling within subsection (5), must) decide to remove him from that list.

(2)The first condition is that the continued inclusion of the practitioner in the list would be prejudicial to the efficiency of the services which those included in the list undertake to provide (and such a case is referred to in this Chapter as an “efficiency case”).

(3)The second condition is that the practitioner—

(a)has (whether on his own or together with another) by an act or omission caused, or risked causing, detriment to any health scheme by securing or trying to secure for himself or another any financial or other benefit, and

(b)knew that he or the other was not entitled to the benefit,

(and such a case is referred to in this Chapter as a “fraud case”).

(4)The third condition is that the practitioner is unsuitable to be included in the list (and such a case is referred to in this Chapter as an “unsuitability case”).

(5)In unsuitability cases, the Primary Care Trust must remove the practitioner from the list in prescribed circumstances.

(6)The Primary Care Trust must state which condition (or conditions) it is relying on when removing a practitioner from a list.

(7)Health scheme” means—

(a)any of the health services under section 1(1) of this Act, section 1(1) of the National Health Service (Wales) Act 2006 (c. 42), or any enactment corresponding to section 1(1) of this Act and extending to Scotland or Northern Ireland, and

(b)any prescribed scheme,

and regulations may prescribe any scheme for the purposes of this subsection which appears to the Secretary of State to be a health or medical scheme paid for out of public funds.

(8)Detriment to a health scheme includes detriment to any patient of, or person working in, that scheme or any person liable to pay charges for services provided under that scheme.

(9)In this Chapter a “practitioner” means a person included in a pharmaceutical list.

152Contingent removalE+W

(1)In an efficiency case or a fraud case, the Primary Care Trust may, instead of deciding to remove a practitioner from its list, decide to remove him contingently.

(2)If it so decides, it must impose such conditions as it may decide on his inclusion in the list with a view to—

(a)removing any prejudice to the efficiency of the services in question (in an efficiency case), or

(b)preventing further acts or omissions within section 151(3)(a) (in a fraud case).

(3)If the Primary Care Trust determines that the practitioner has failed to comply with a condition, it may decide to—

(a)vary the conditions, or impose different conditions, or

(b)remove him from its list.

(4)The Primary Care Trust may decide to vary the terms of service of the person concerned for the purpose of or in connection with the imposition of any conditions by virtue of this section.

153Fraud and unsuitability cases: supplementaryE+W

(1)Where the practitioner is a body corporate providing pharmaceutical services, the body corporate must be treated for the purposes of this Chapter as meeting a condition referred to in section 151(3) or (4) if any one of the body of persons controlling the body meets that condition (whether or not he first did so when he was such a person).

(2)A practitioner must be treated for the purposes of this Chapter as meeting the condition referred to in section 151(3) if—

(a)another person, because of an act or omission of his occurring in the course of providing any services mentioned in section 151(1) on the practitioner's behalf, meets that condition, and

(b)the practitioner failed to take all such steps as were reasonable to prevent acts or omissions within section 151(3)(a) occurring in the course of the provision of those services on his behalf.

154SuspensionE+W

(1)If the Primary Care Trust is satisfied that it is necessary to do so for the protection of members of the public or is otherwise in the public interest, it may suspend a practitioner from its list—

(a)while it decides whether or not to exercise its powers under section 151 or 152 (other than in circumstances falling within paragraph (b)), or

(b)while it waits for a decision affecting the practitioner of a court or of a body which regulates—

(i)the practitioner's profession,

(ii)the profession of a person providing any of the services mentioned in section 151(1) on the practitioner's behalf, or

(iii)if the practitioner is a body corporate, the profession of one of its directors, or one of the body of persons controlling it or (if it is a limited liability partnership) one of its members,

or one of that regulatory body's committees.

(2)The references in subsection (1)(b) to a court or regulatory body are to a court or such a body anywhere in the world.

(3)In a case falling within subsection (1)(a), the Primary Care Trust must specify the length of the period of suspension.

(4)In a case falling within subsection (1)(b), the Primary Care Trust may specify that the practitioner remains suspended after the decision referred to there for an additional period which the Primary Care Trust must specify.

(5)In either case—

(a)before that period expires it may extend, or further extend, the suspension for a further specified period, or

(b)if that period has expired, it may impose a further suspension, for a period which it must specify.

(6)The period of suspension (in a subsection (1)(a) case) or the additional period (in a subsection (1)(b) case), including in both cases the period of any further suspension imposed under subsection (5)(b), may not exceed six months in aggregate, except—

(a)in prescribed circumstances, when it may not extend beyond any prescribed event (which may be the expiry of a prescribed period),

(b)if, on the application of the Primary Care Trust, the [F1First-tier Tribunal] orders accordingly before the expiry of the period of suspension, or

(c)if the Primary Care Trust has applied under paragraph (b) before the expiry of the period of suspension, but the [F2First-tier Tribunal] has not made an order by the time it expires, in which case it continues until the [F2First-tier Tribunal] has made an order.

(7)If the [F3First-tier Tribunal] does so order, it must specify—

(a)the date on which the period of suspension will end, or

(b)an event beyond which it will not continue.

(8)The [F4First-tier Tribunal] may, on the application of the Primary Care Trust, make a further order (complying with subsection (7)) at any time while the period of suspension pursuant to the earlier order is still continuing.

(9)The Secretary of State may make regulations providing for payments to practitioners who are suspended.

(10)Those regulations may include provision for the amount of the payments, or the method of calculating the amount, to be determined by the Secretary of State or by another person appointed for the purpose by the Secretary of State.

Textual Amendments

155Suspension pending appealE+W

(1)This section applies if the Primary Care Trust decides to remove a practitioner from a list under section 151.

(2)In such a case it may also decide to suspend the practitioner from the list pending any appeal by him, if it is satisfied that it is necessary to do so for the protection of members of the public or is otherwise in the public interest.

(3)If it does suspend the practitioner under this section, the suspension has effect from the date when the Primary Care Trust gave him notice of the suspension.

(4)The suspension has effect until its revocation under subsection (5) or (6) or, if later, until the expiry of the period of 28 days referred to in section 158(1), or, if the practitioner appeals under section 158, until the [F5First-tier Tribunal] has disposed of the appeal.

(5)The Primary Care Trust may revoke a suspension imposed under this section.

(6)If the practitioner appeals under section 158 against the decision of the Primary Care Trust to remove him from the list, the [F6First-tier Tribunal] may also revoke a suspension imposed on him under this section.

(7)Subsections (9) and (10) of section 154 apply for the purposes of this section as they apply for the purposes of that.

Textual Amendments

156Effect of suspensionE+W

While a practitioner is suspended (whether under section 154 or under section 155) he must be treated as not being included in the list from which he has been suspended even though his name appears in it.

157Review of decisionsE+W

(1)The Primary Care Trust may, and (except in prescribed cases) if requested in writing to do so by the practitioner must, review a contingent removal or a suspension (other than a contingent removal or a suspension imposed by, or a suspension continuing pursuant to, an order of the [F7First-tier Tribunal] , or a suspension imposed under section 155).

(2)The practitioner may not request a review before the expiry of the period of—

(a)three months beginning with the date of the decision of the Primary Care Trust to suspend or contingently remove him, or (as appropriate),

(b)six months beginning with the date of its decision on the previous review.

(3)On such a review, the Primary Care Trust may—

(a)confirm the contingent removal or the suspension,

(b)in the case of a suspension, terminate it,

(c)in the case of a contingent removal, vary the conditions, impose different conditions, revoke the contingent removal, or remove the practitioner from the list.

Textual Amendments

158AppealsE+W

(1)A practitioner may appeal to the [F8First-tier Tribunal] against a decision of a Primary Care Trust mentioned in subsection (2) F9....

(2)The Primary Care Trust decisions in question are—

(a)to remove the practitioner from a list (under section 151 or 152(3) or under subsection (5)(b) of this section),

(b)to remove him contingently (under section 152),

(c)to impose any particular condition under section 152, or to vary any condition or to impose any different condition under that section,

(d)to vary his terms of service (under section 152(4)),

(e)any decision on a review of a contingent removal under section 157.

(3)The appeal must be way of redetermination of the decision of the Primary Care Trust.

(4)On an appeal, the [F10First-tier Tribunal] may make any decision which the Primary Care Trust could have made.

(5)If the [F11First-tier Tribunal] decides to remove the practitioner contingently—

(a)the Primary Care Trust and the practitioner may each apply to the [F11First-tier Tribunal] for the conditions imposed on the practitioner to be varied, for different conditions to be imposed, or for the contingent removal to be revoked, and

(b)the Primary Care Trust may remove him from its list if it determines that he has failed to comply with a condition.

(6)The Primary Care Trust may not remove a person from a list, or impose a contingent removal—

(a)until the expiry of the period of 28 days referred to in subsection (1), or

(b)if the practitioner appeals within that period, until the [F12First-tier Tribunal] has disposed of the appeal.

(7)Regulations may provide for payments by Primary Care Trusts to practitioners who are removed from lists pursuant to decisions of the [F13First-tier Tribunal] under this section, but whose appeals against those decisions are successful.

(8)Regulations under subsection (7) may include provision for the amount of the payments, or the method of calculating the amount, to be determined by the Secretary of State or by another person appointed for the purpose by the Secretary of State.

159National disqualificationE+W

(1)If the [F14First-tier Tribunal] removes the practitioner from a list, it may also decide to disqualify him from inclusion in—

(a)the pharmaceutical lists prepared by each Primary Care Trust,

(b)[F15the supplementary lists prepared by each Primary Care Trust,]

(c)the lists under section 91, 106, or 123 prepared by each Primary Care Trust,

(d)the lists under [F16section 146][F16section 147A] prepared by each Primary Care Trust, or the lists corresponding to the lists under section 91 prepared by each Primary Care Trust by virtue of regulations made under section 145,

(e)the lists corresponding to the lists mentioned in paragraphs (a) to (d) prepared by each Local Health Board under or by virtue of the National Health Service (Wales) Act 2006 (c. 42),

or only from inclusion in one or more descriptions of such lists prepared by each Primary Care Trust and each Local Health Board, the description being specified by the [F14First-tier Tribunal] in its decision.

(2)A decision by the [F14First-tier Tribunal] to do what is mentioned in subsection (1) is referred to in this section as the imposition of a national disqualification.

(3)The [F14First-tier Tribunal] may also impose a national disqualification on a practitioner if it dismisses an appeal by him against the refusal by a Primary Care Trust to include him in such a list.

(4)The Primary Care Trust may apply to the [F14First-tier Tribunal] for a national disqualification to be imposed on a person after the Primary Care Trust has—

(a)removed him from a list prepared by it of any of the kinds referred to in subsection (1)(a) to (d), or

(b)refused to include him in such a list.

(5)Any such application must be made before the end of the period of three months beginning with the date of the removal or of the Primary Care Trust's refusal.

(6)If the [F17First-tier Tribunal] imposes a national disqualification on a person—

(a)no Primary Care Trust or Local Health Board may include him in a list of any of the kinds prepared by it from which he has been disqualified from inclusion, and

(b)if he is included in such a list, each Primary Care Trust and each Local Health Board in whose list he is included must remove him from it.

(7)The [F18First-tier Tribunal] may at the request of the person upon whom it has been imposed review a national disqualification, and on a review may confirm it or revoke it.

(8)Subject to subsection (9), the person may not request such a review before the end of the period of—

(a)two years beginning with the date on which the national disqualification was imposed, or

(b)one year beginning with the date of the [F19First-tier Tribunal’s] decision on the last such review.

(9)The Secretary of State may provide in regulations for subsection (8) to have effect in prescribed circumstances as if the reference there to “two years” or “one year” were a reference to a different period specified in the regulations.

Textual Amendments

F15S. 159(1)(b) omitted (27.3.2012 for specified purposes) by virtue of Health and Social Care Act 2012 (c. 7), ss. 208(4)(a), 306(1)(d)(4)

F16Words in s. 159(1)(d) substituted (27.3.2012 for specified purposes) by Health and Social Care Act 2012 (c. 7), ss. 208(4)(b), 306(1)(d)(4)

Modifications etc. (not altering text)

160Notification of decisionsE+W

Regulations may require a Primary Care Trust to notify prescribed persons, or persons of prescribed descriptions, of any decision it makes under this Chapter, and of any information relevant to the decision which it considers appropriate to include in the notification.

161Withdrawal from listsE+W

Regulations may provide for circumstances in which a practitioner—

(a)whom a Primary Care Trust is investigating in order to see whether there are grounds for exercising its powers under section 151, 152 or 154,

(b)whom a Primary Care Trust has decided to remove from a list under section 151 or 152, or contingently remove under section 152, but who has not yet been removed or contingently removed, or

(c)who has been suspended under section 154,

may not withdraw from a list in which he is included.

162Regulations about decisions under this ChapterE+W

(1)Any decision by a Primary Care Trust referred to in this Chapter must be reached in accordance with regulations about such decisions.

(2)The regulations must include provision—

(a)requiring the practitioner to be given notice of any allegation against him,

(b)giving him the opportunity of putting his case at a hearing before a Primary Care Trust makes any decision affecting him under this Chapter,

(c)requiring him to be given notice of the decision of the Primary Care Trust and the reasons for it and of any right of appeal which he may have.

(3)The regulations may, in particular, make provision as to criteria which the Primary Care Trust must apply when making decisions in unsuitability cases.

163Corresponding provisions in Scotland and Northern IrelandE+W

(1)This section applies where it appears to the Secretary of State that there is provision in Scotland or Northern Ireland under which a person may be dealt with in any way which corresponds (whether or not exactly) with a way in which a person may be dealt with under this Chapter.

(2)A decision in Scotland or Northern Ireland to deal with such a person in such a way is referred to in this section as a “corresponding decision”.

(3)If this section applies, the Secretary of State may make regulations providing for the effect to be given in England to a corresponding decision.

(4)That effect need not be the same as the effect of the decision in the place where it was made.

(5)The regulations may not provide for a corresponding decision to be reviewed or revoked in England.