Why medical aid costs are soaring in SA. Hospitals and specialists are ‘overgrazing’ medical aid members because there is a lack of regulatory controls, says the Board of Healthcare Funders.
Private hospital
and specialists’ fees need to be regulated to contain costs for medical scheme
members, according to the Board of Healthcare Funders (BHF).
These fees take
the “lion’s share” of members’ contributions, BHF Executive Director Dr
Humphrey Zokufa told the Competition Commission’s market inquiry into private
healthcare in Cape Town
on Tuesday.
“We are overgrazing the 8.8 million lives on
medical schemes, who face increased contributions and shrinking benefits, while
medical schemes face deficits,” said Zokufa, who laid the blame for increased
costs on the fact that there is “no regulatory forum that controls what
hospitals and specialists do”.
The Competition
Commission set aside annual tariff negotiations in 2003, deeming it to be
anti-competitive behaviour.
The BHF’s Dr
Rajesh Patel said 72 percent of births in the private sector were Caesareans,
while a rate of 35 percent might be acceptable.“These Caesareans
are not clinically indicated but done for convenience, and ensured an extra
half a billion rand was paid to hospitals,” said Patel.
The BHF, which represents
most of the 83 private schemes in South Africa excluding Discovery
Health, is a lobby group for medical schemes and scheme administrators.
However,
Commissioners were not that sympathetic to the BHF’s complaint.
Inquiry
chairperson Judge Sandile Ngcobo said that while members were struggling to pay
their contributions, medical schemes were prepared to pay managed care
companies rates as much as 28 percent of their expenditure to manage members’
claims.
Prof Sharon Fonn,
also a commissioner, asked why medical schemes’ benefit packages favoured
hospitalisation if hospital care was so expensive.Meanwhile,
Commissioner Dr Nthuthuko Bhengu asked the BHF if it did not have a conflict of
interest as it represented both schemes and administratorsPatel responded
that members’ main concern was hospital cover, and that the BHF’s attempts to
orient schemes towards effective primary healthcare had not been that
successful.
The Competition
Commission has initiated the inquiry because it “has reason to believe that
there are features of the sector that prevent, distort or restrict
competition”.
Public hearings
will be conducted until early March and the commission is expected to table its
recommendations by December. – Health-e News.
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