The World
Chiropractic Alliance
Position Paper on
Pre-Payment of Chiropractic Services
The World Chiropractic
Alliance recognizes that doctors of chiropractic may elect to charge a
case fee for professional services, may permit patients to pay for
professional services in advance and/or care may be offered and paid over
fixed time periods, for example on a yearly basis. Fee structures and
agreements are routinely negotiated on such bases between the chiropractor
and the patient.
These may include family case fees where there are
two or more members of a family under care. In such situations it is not
uncommon for discounts to be provided for fees paid in advance and/or
discounts for each additional family member under care.
Such arrangements are common in other clinical
specialties and professions, for example: orthodontics, obstetrics, and
law.
It is the position of the WCA that such practices are
usual, customary, and ethical provided that the financial agreements are
explicitly revealed in a document signed by the patient and the doctor and
provided that the fees are reasonable considering the care being provided.
It is further the position of the WCA that regulatory
bodies should consider such practices to be in compliance with the laws,
rules, and regulations of the jurisdiction where the chiropractor
practices.
It is not uncommon for provisions to be made ensuring
that funds are not expended until services are provided and that patients
may receive a prompt refund of unused fees upon request.
One method that chiropractors may use who charge case
fees and/or accept prepayments is to employ a trust account, separate from
the doctor’s personal or business account, to hold unearned fees until
professional services are actually provided.
“Trust funds” are defined as unearned fees in the
form of cash, or property other than cash, which are received by a
chiropractor prior to the chiropractor rendering professional services for
which such fees are received.
If a trust fund is used, the following trust
accounting procedures are recommended:
(a) A separate bank account other than the
chiropractor’s regular business or personal account designated for the
deposit of such funds.
(b) A journal, file of receipts, file of deposit
slips, or checkbook stubs listing the source and date of all receipts of
trust funds.
(c) A journal which may consist of cancelled
checks, showing the date and recipient of all trust funds disbursements.
(d) A file or ledger containing an accounting for
each person from whom trust money has been received.
(e) Retain all cancelled checks drawn on the trust
account.
Trust account records should be retained for a period
of at least six (6) years.
Case fees, paying for professional services in
advance, paying for care over fixed time periods, family case fees and
discounts for fees paid in advance are mechanisms that doctors of
chiropractic utilize in order to assist patients in managing their health
care finances. Such efforts are an inherent part of the ethical
responsibility of health care providers to lessen the financial barriers
to needed care.
-- passed unanimously by the WCA
Board of Directors and issued February 2006