High hopes for private healthcare industry report

04 July 2018 - 11:47 By Ernest Mabuza
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File photo.
File photo.
Image: Gallo Images/Thinkstock

The Health Funders Association (HFA) is hopeful that a new report into the private healthcare sector‚ which will be released on Thursday‚ will serve the best interests of all South Africans.

The Health Market Inquiry (HMI) is a detailed report conducted by the Competition Commission of South Africa. According to the commission‚ it is a general investigation into the state of competition in the industry.

The commission initiated the inquiry because it had reason to believe that there were features of the sector that prevented‚ distorted or restricted competition.

The HFA‚ which represents a collective membership base of 53% of South Africa’s medical scheme principal members‚ was among the organisations that made submissions to the inquiry during January and February this year.

Lerato Mosiah‚ CEO of the association‚ said on Wednesday that they hoped the HMI would recommend interventions that would ensure the industry remained viable in support of universal healthcare for all South Africans.

“These could include a mechanism for negotiating doctors’ and hospital charges more effectively‚ and mandatory medical scheme membership for people earning above a certain threshold‚” she said.

Commenting on the recently released Medical Schemes Amendment Bill‚ which seeks to stop co-payments on certain benefits for medical aid members‚ Mosiah said these provisions in isolation had the unintended consequence of threatening the sustainability of medical schemes.

“While we welcome dialogue in the sector‚ it is critical that this takes into consideration the broader picture and context‚” she said.

She said it was important to understand that medical schemes used risk management measures in order to ensure that they remained viable.

“Tampering with these limited measures in isolation would accelerate the erosion of reserves and leave medical schemes with very few options to maintain sustainability‚” said Mosiah.

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