HealthPREMIUM

Medical specialists reject SA’s NHI Bill

Picture: 123RF/RONSTIK
Picture: 123RF/RONSTIK

SA’s key industry association for medical specialists says it does not support the National Health Insurance Bill (NHI), describing it as financially unviable and at odds with the rights of people to choose how and where they obtain healthcare.

The SA Private Practitioners Forum (SAPPF) has also raised concerns about the sustainability of the private healthcare sector if, as the bill proposes, the role of medical schemes is sharply curtailed.

Its concerns about the potential effects of the bill echo sentiments expressed earlier this week by the country’s biggest doctor organisation, the SA Medical Association (Sama).

The bill is the first piece of enabling legislation for NHI, the government’s plan for universal health coverage, and was approved by parliament’s portfolio committee on health last week without any material changes to the version MP's received in 2019. It will now go to the National Assembly for debate, where it is expected to be approved. While the bill still has some way to go before it can be enacted, as it must still be considered by the National Council of Provinces and then sent to the president for assent, its approval by the committee nevertheless marks a key milestone.

The SAPPF said the “very minor” changes made to the bill failed to address any of the concerns raised by private healthcare practitioners and would not change its effect on the delivery of private healthcare. Section 33 of the bill sharply pares back the role of medical schemes, limiting them to providing only complementary cover to services that are not covered by the NHI Fund.

The bill proposes establishing the fund, which will be the sole purchaser of health services. Business Unity SA and SA’s biggest medical scheme administrator Discovery Health had lobbied for the legislation to allow multiple purchasers of health services, and thus provide a life line for medical schemes.

“Limiting the capacity of medical schemes to fund healthcare reduces the opportunity to improve access, and infringes on the rights of people to make choices about how and where they access healthcare,” the SAPPF said in a statement to its members on Thursday. “The private sector has tools and resources that are able to increase access to care by contracting with the state. To achieve this and be sustainable, the private sector must be able to run independently with free choice of patients,” it said.

The SAPPF said the NHI Bill’s purchasing model would have an immeasurably negative effect on the fiscus, “at a time when the economic climate in SA is dismal, corruption in every sphere including healthcare is constantly being uncovered, load-shedding is crippling the economy and national infrastructure is crumbling.”

“To proceed with its introduction at this time is irresponsible,” said the SAPPF.

Sama said at the weekend that the bill had been developed without regard for the concerns and recommendations of experts, and in its current form set the health system up for failure. Sama said it supported the principal of universal health coverage, but did not believe the NHI Bill would achieve that goal.

kahnt@businesslive.co.za

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