The BDA maintains that the further information is required in order to make the GDC’s consultation fair.
The BDA has also called on the regulator to disclose the documents passed to accountants KPMG, who have been commissioned by the GDC to review the assumptions underpinning the proposed rise in the fee, and to publish KPMG’s report.
BDA lawyers have argued that the fact that the GDC has had to commission a full review of its assumptions supports the case that no sufficient or transparent justification has yet been given for the ARF increase.
Mick Armstrong, chair of the British Dental Association Principal Executive Committee, said:
“After months of bluff and bluster it’s time the GDC showed its hand. The dental regulator is doing itself no favours keeping dentists in the dark. If there is a real case for fee increases we believe it should have been shared with the profession long ago. We now expect full and comprehensive disclosure, including the evidence that’s been passed to KPMG.
“We do not accept that the GDC’s argument that any increase is ‘inevitable’. Any serious consultation should have considered what, if any, increase was appropriate. Instead the result appears to be a forgone conclusion.
“It is now for the GDC to share its case with us and prove that its fee-hike was not pre-determined. It’s not rocket science. Just give dentists the facts and the opportunity to engage.”
The BDA has asked the GDC to confirm whether the KPMG report will be made public well in advance of the decision on fees intended to be taken on October 30 2014. It has also called for the consultation period to be extended to November 30 2014 to enable consultees to properly consider any new evidence.