Jamaica Gleaner

Nat’l health insurance scheme can boost economy – CAPRI

- Romario Scott/Gleaner Writer romario.scott@gleanerjm.com

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR of the Caribbean Policy Research Institute (CAPRI) Dr Damien King contends that it is feasible for Jamaica to have a national health insurance scheme given the emerging public health crisis on the horizon precipitat­ed by the high level of chronic diseases affecting the population.

King, who was speaking yesterday at a CAPRI forum dubbed Beyond No User Fees to National Health Insurance For All at the Mona Visitors’ Lodge at The University of the West Indies (UWI), Mona, said national health insurance coverage would boost the economy and reduce poverty.

“There is nothing that tips a marginal family into poverty more than absence of coverage for health. [It’s] either because the cost of medical treatment is sufficient­ly catastroph­ic that it destroys the family’s basis of wealth or the absence of having to cover that cost then the illness or disease itself allows the breadwinne­r not to be able to work, and that tips the family

into poverty,” King said.

A national health insurance programme is being envisaged to drive, financiall­y, the concept of having universal access.

King said as the economy grows and people’s financial standing improves, universal health coverage is necessary to prevent people from slipping back into poverty.

“Universal health coverage has been demonstrat­ed to be the single most [important] element of a socialsafe­ty net,” King, a senior lecturer at

The UWI, pointed out.

“When people don’t have proper health coverage, then they tend not to invest as a much in their children’s education, they tend not to invest as much in their own skills training, and they tend to start few small businesses,” he noted.

“We are in a context where a lot of public investment has a high return, has a legitimate­ly high return, investment in infrastruc­ture, investment in other poverty-reduction measures, investment in education, so when we putt for discussion a national health insurance scheme, it is not to say that all the resources have to go into a national insurance scheme and ignore these other demands on the public purse, but at the very least, what we are suggesting is that the returns for such a scheme are sufficient­ly high that it has to be a part of the national discussion going forward,” King cautioned.

Also speaking at the forum, James Cercone, president and founder of Sanigest Internacio­nal, said there was an investment return of nine to one in having a national insurance plan.

Chris Zacca, president of Sagicor, a major player in the local insurance sector, said that his company’s actuaries have warned that the cost for healthcare in the near future “is going to overwhelm the country if something is not done”.

In 2018, it was estimated that some 75 per cent of Jamaicans were without health insurance.

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