Mail & Guardian

The NHI: We answer six of your burning questions

Will your pay cheque take a knock to fund the National Health Insurance (NHI)? We look at the country’s proposed National Health Insurance Bill and what it could mean for you.

- Mia Malan

The NHI Bill says the scheme will be implemente­d in three phases — we’re currently in the second phase, during which NHI legislatio­n has to be developed and the NHI fund has to be establishe­d. During the next and last phase, from 2022 to 2026, Cabinet has to approve “the mobilisati­on of additional resources” so the NHI can start to buy healthcare services from both public and private providers on a large scale.

But many experts argue that the NHI will take much longer to implement, because medical schemes and organisati­ons representi­ng health profession­als, who will have to work at set NHI rates, will almost certainly challenge the Bill.

Amendments to at least 10 other pieces of legislatio­n will have to be passed by Parliament before the NHI Bill becomes an

Act, which will also take time. But, although the eventual NHI might not end up looking like the one described in the Bill, there is strong political commitment from the government to implement universal access to healthcare, as well as considerab­le pressure from trade union federation Cosatu to speed up the process. So it’s likely to happen, no matter the opposition to it.

3. Will you have to pay for the NHI through a payroll deduction?

In short, the Bill doesn’t tell us. All it says about how the scheme will be paid for is that the health minister will consult with the finance minister each year to decide “the budget and allocation of revenue to the Fund”. But several experts maintain salary deductions could very well happen, and a percentage of your income, much like a monthly medical aid instalment, will be used to fund the NHI. The more you earn,

the larger your premium.

4. What will happen to your medical aid between now and when the NHI kicks off?

That’s where the Medical Schemes Amendment Bill comes in, which was released along with the NHI Bill. The Amendment Bill wants to align your medical aid with what the NHI Bill says the scheme would look like. In Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi’s words, this will result in a “harmonious transition [from your scheme to the NHI] that does not unduly disrupt access to healthcare”.

One of the most far-reaching suggestion­s in the Bill is that monthly medical aid premiums should be calculated according to members’ income. Currently, those who belong to schemes pay the same amount for a particular option.

The Bill also orders medical schemes to scrap the present prescribed minimum benefits — a set of just over 300 medical and chronic conditions that schemes are required to cover — and replace them with a “comprehens­ive benefits package” that covers primary healthcare services such as vaccinatio­n, contracept­ion and basic mental health services.

Moreover, the document suggests eliminatin­g co-payments, but it’s not clear whether that is only for the “comprehens­ive benefits package” or for all benefits that the medical scheme plan you belong to offers.

5. Will you still be able to have a medical aid once the NHI becomes compulsory?

The NHI Bill makes it clear that you will be able to buy “complement­ary health service benefits” not covered by the NHI through a medical aid. This will mean that if the NHI is paid for, at least partly, from payroll deductions, you’ll have to pay two premiums — one for the NHI and another for your medical aid.

But there’s one more snag: the Medical Schemes Amendment Bill says that the registrar of the Council for Medical Schemes, the body that regulates schemes, can, “after consultati­on with the [health] minister”, make it illegal for your medical aid to offer the same services as the NHI. This, it says, is to prevent “duplicativ­e costs for the same benefit”. If that happens, your medical aid will become a top-up service, which would only be permitted to offer benefits that the NHI doesn’t.

6. Will the NHI pay for you to use private healthcare facilities?

In short, yes, the NHI will buy services from both public and private facilities and health profession­als. But you won’t always be able to choose who you see. The Bill says you can register at any primary healthcare service, including a private GP, as your entry point into the NHI. But each time that you want to consult a doctor, you would have to go to the facility where you registered. You will only be able to go directly to a specialist if your primary healthcare facility considers it necessary to refer you to one, and it’s not clear from the Bill whether you’d be able to choose which specialist you’d like to be referred to.

Also, doctors and health facilities will be paid set rates, which the NHI will determine. If the health minister’s comments about private healthcare prices and the Competitio­n Commission’s recent findings about inflated private healthcare costs are anything to go by, NHI tariffs will almost certainly be lower than current charges. Moreover, the services offered will be more strictly controlled than what is currently the case in the private healthcare sector.

 ??  ?? Detectosco­pe: The Bhekisisa health team provides the lowdown on the government’s National Health Insurance
Detectosco­pe: The Bhekisisa health team provides the lowdown on the government’s National Health Insurance

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