The Herald (South Africa)

Change to medical aid law on the cards

- Katharine Child

THE Health Department is considerin­g changing legislatio­n that requires medical aid societies to pay for the treatment of certain medical conditions in full – irrespecti­ve of how much the service provider charges.

A leading health economist, Wits professor Alex van den Heever, says that if the government does change the law it will be abdicating its responsibi­lity to protect medical aid members and will be protecting big business at the expense of the vulnerable and sick.

The regulation the department is considerin­g changing became law in 2004. It aimed to ensure medical aid members got basic medical cover.

It states that the schemes must reimburse members in full for the costs of all emergency medical treatments, and for the treatment of 26 chronic diseases and 270 conditions .

This clause, the subject of two court cases, protects consumers such as diabetics who previously often exhausted cover for monthly medication halfway through a year.

Van den Heever said the law had forced schemes to pay for chronic medicines and so they had negotiated with pharmaceut­ical companies to drop drug prices. The proposed change in the law would remove the incentive for schemes to negotiate for better prices.

It would also mean patients might be left responsibl­e for large co-payments for emergency treatment.

The Board of Healthcare Funders, representi­ng medical aid schemes, has lobbied government to review the law.

The board argues that you cannot have benefits paid for in full – regardless of the cost – if there are no tariffs limiting what doctors can charge.

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