Business Day

Lobby groups line up to petition Ramaphosa on NHI legislatio­n

- Health & Science Correspond­ent Tamar Kahn kahnt@businessli­ve.

Approval by the National Council of Provinces (NCOP) of the controvers­ial National Health Insurance (NHI) Bill continued to draw fire on Thursday with a rising number of organisati­ons saying they would petition the president to send the legislatio­n back to parliament.

The bill is to create the legislativ­e framework for the ANC government’s policy of universal health coverage, which aims to scrap SA’s two-tier health system and ensure all eligible patients are provided with free services at the point of delivery.

If enacted, the legislatio­n will pave the way for the establishm­ent of an NHI Fund that will be the sole purchaser of healthcare services, with medical schemes restricted to covering only services that are not provided by the NHI.

The National Assembly spent three-and-a-half years considerin­g the bill, but the NCOP dedicated only six months to it and made no amendments to the draft legislatio­n. The bill was approved by eight of the nine provinces on Wednesday night, with only the Western Cape voting against it.

Parliament is now expected to send the bill to President Cyril Ramaphosa, who can either sign it into law, refer it back to parliament on legal or technical grounds, or refer it to the Constituti­onal Court to gauge its constituti­onality.

News of the bill’s passage through parliament has drawn fire from organised business, healthcare profession­als and medical schemes. Business Unity SA (Busa), Business for SA (B4SA), the newly formed SA Health Profession­als Collaborat­ion (SAHPC) and the Health Funders Associatio­n (HFA) say that they will petition Ramaphosa to send the bill back to parliament for further considerat­ion.

Busa and B4SA said that they will petition the president on constituti­onal grounds because the bill limits citizens’ freedom of choice and ability to access healthcare.

Section 33 of the bill, which says medical schemes will be limited to provide cover for benefits not covered under NHI, is at odds with the constituti­on’s provisions for the progressiv­e realisatio­n of the right to healthcare.

In addition, the NCOP’s public consultati­on on the bill was rushed and inadequate. “Busa and B4SA have, throughout the entire NHI Bill legislativ­e process, highlighte­d the deficienci­es in the bill, including those unconstitu­tional provisions that required clarificat­ion and amendment,” said B4SA steering committee chair Martin Kingston.

“Our concerns, recommenda­tions, research, data and inputs, as well as those made by a wide range of experts and affected stakeholde­rs, have been summarily ignored by the parliament­ary portfolio committee on health and the NCOP

“No amendments were made at all, including those suggested by the department of health itself, which is deeply concerning for our country and democracy,” said Kingston.

Should it be brought into law, the bill would delay access to universal health coverage, lead to disinvestm­ent in the health sector and damage the economy, he said.

The SAHPC, representi­ng nine associatio­ns for healthcare profession­als, said that the bill is unconstitu­tional, unworkable and could lead to a deteriorat­ion in standards.

The bill does not adequately address the threat of corruption, and places the training and retention of health profession­als at risk, it said.

“The president has both an opportunit­y and obligation to ensure that the NHI improves, rather than limits overall healthcare for everyone,” said SAHPC spokespers­on KC Makhubele.

The HFA, an associatio­n for medical schemes and administra­tors, said parliament failed to take proper cognisance of the bill’s implicatio­ns for citizens’ constituti­onal rights, healthcare as a whole and the economy.

“This is too important to let pass without every effort being made to ensure the president, as guardian of the constituti­on, is fully aware of the unintended, yet completely foreseeabl­e, consequenc­es signing the NHI Bill into law in its current form would have for SA,” said HFA chair Craig Comrie.

The Hospital Associatio­n of SA, representi­ng private hospitals, and the Board of Healthcare Funders (BHF), which represents medical schemes, also expressed disappoint­ment at the NCOP’s approval of the bill.

The BHF said the bill’s restrictio­ns on medical schemes would render them unsustaina­ble, and this section should be removed entirely.

 ?? /123RF/Samsonovs ?? Unworkable: The health reform bill is unworkable, unconstitu­tional and may lower standards, say its opponents.
/123RF/Samsonovs Unworkable: The health reform bill is unworkable, unconstitu­tional and may lower standards, say its opponents.

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