The Citizen (KZN)

How medical savings work

OPTIONAL: MOST MEDICAL SCHEMES HAVE OPTIONS THAT INCLUDE A MSA

- Sandy van Dijl Sandy van Dijl is Alexander Forbes Health branch manager in KwaZulu-Natal

Ensure the medical aid scheme option you decide on is appropriat­e for your family.

Most medical schemes have options that include a medical savings account (MSA). This is a mechanism to assist members in making provision for their day-to-day medical expenses, those which typically take place outside of hospital, such as GP consultati­ons, medication, dentistry, optometry and casualty visits.

It is important to ensure that the medical aid scheme option you decide on is the most appropriat­e choice for you and your family. There is a fine line to being over or under-insured, but your choice should ideally provide you with at least the benefits you are probably going to require in the coming year.

The amount you may contribute towards your MSA is regulated and may not exceed 25% of your total monthly contributi­on. Medical schemes can however set the savings account amounts to any fixed amount/percentage per plan, as long it does not exceed the allowable amount/percentage.

The number and value of the day-today medical claims made against your MSA, determine whether or not you have money left here at the end of a benefit year.

If your claims were less than your medical savings, you’ll end the year with a positive savings balance that’ll carry forward to the following benefit year. There’s no rule around the maximum amount of money that may accumulate in a MSA year-onyear.

Understand that MSA isn’t a vehicle designed to assist you with your savings goals. Interest paid on the positive savings account balances is generally lower than one would be able to receive within dedicated bank accounts.

You should therefore ideally not be accumulati­ng large amounts in your MSA, unless you anticipate certain medical expenses in the near future. For example, covering allowable expenses for prescripti­on spectacles or expensive specialise­d dentistry you may require over and above your available benefit. If you’re on a threshold plan you could also fund your self-payment gap either in part or in full depending on the amount of accumulate­d medical savings carried forward.

Even although the amount within your MSA may seem significan­t, in a serious illness, this could be used up very quickly.

If you have a large savings balance you also have the option to buy down to a plan that doesn’t offer a MSA. These are usually hospital type options within the medical scheme. By selecting one of these you’ll reduce your monthly medical scheme contributi­on, and gain access to your positive medical savings balance, which would be paid out to you after four months.

However, don’t do this without seriously considerin­g the consequenc­es eg. you’ll have to pay all day to day expenses yourself. MSA monies are generally made available upfront, at the beginning of each year. This way dayto-day medical expenses can be funded by your MSA earlier in the year.

If you have not made provision for day-to-day medical expenses through the medical scheme, you’d need to put funds aside to pay for those costs.

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 ?? Picture: Shuttersto­ck ?? DOS AND DON’TS. You can’t withdraw the money in your medical savings account. The Medical Schemes Act does not allow for this.
Picture: Shuttersto­ck DOS AND DON’TS. You can’t withdraw the money in your medical savings account. The Medical Schemes Act does not allow for this.

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