Saturday Star

Confused about medical cover ? Here’s help

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CHOOSING a medical scheme from those available to you and then choosing a plan, or option, offered by the scheme that fits in with both what you can afford and the level of health care you need is likely to leave you confused. Not only are many offerings by the medical schemes highly complex, but myriad difference­s make them difficult to compare.

The annual GTC Medical Aid Survey does much of the hard work for you by analysing and rating medical schemes and providing a standardis­ed comparison and ranking of the choices available to you – and the results of the 2017 survey have just been published.

GTC, for merly Grant Thornton Capital, is a leading financial advisory business, establishe­d in 1991 from within the Grant Thornton Johannesbu­rg audit practice, itself part of Grant Thornton Internatio­nal.

The medical scheme survey has been produced annually since 2011.

Jill Larkan, the head of healthcare consulting at GTC, who is responsibl­e for the survey, says it “cuts through the notoriousl­y complicate­d landscape of the medical aid industry and simplifies it according to the factors that matter most when consumers choose a medical scheme and option”.

Commenting on the 2017 survey, Larkan says although smaller medical schemes are offering good value for money, they have not been as successful as some of the larger schemes in attracting new members, which is essential for the financial health of the scheme over the long term.

This year’s survey reviewed 23 open medical schemes and one closed (limited-membership) scheme, with a total of 144 options, which fell into 11 categories according to the benefits offered. The categories ranged from entry-level and hospital options to saver and comprehens­ive options. Healthcare policies offered by insurance companies were excluded.

When you compare medical scheme offerings, you’re likely to concentrat­e on value for money: what you get in return for your monthly contributi­on. But you also need to consider how financiall­y healthy the scheme is, and how sustainabl­e it is into the future.

Both the value-for-money and the financial health aspects are taken into account in the survey, which gives each option a micro rating (indicating an option’s value-formoney competitiv­eness in relation to others in the same category) and a macro rating (which considers factors such as membership size and growth, average age and financial stability).

“Fedhealth is one of the schemes that has performed consistent­ly well in the micro ratings, indicating that it is very competitiv­ely priced

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