Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

NHI a step in the right direction to address inequality

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LAST-minute lobbying by the business sector led to a week-long delay in the passing of the National Health Insurance (NHI) Bill by the National Council of Provinces last week.

This rather unedifying last-minute loss of nerve by the country’s legislator­s, particular­ly the ANC parliament­arians, revealed not so much the contentiou­s nature of the proposed new health system in South Africa but the poor and pusillanim­ous leadership of the ANC.

Cosatu lamented, in a statement on behalf of labour, that the government “wilted like a cheap suit” under pressure from a little bit of lobbying by business.

Neverthele­ss, the bill was passed despite the very loud objections and threats by the business sector.

As the statement, issued by Cas Coovadia on behalf of Business Unity South Africa (Busa) and Business for South Africa (B4SA), thundered: “The business groups believe that the bill, in its current format, is not only unworkable, unimplemen­table and unaffordab­le, but also unconstitu­tional, both on substantiv­e and procedural grounds.”

Those opposed to the NHI Bill, including the DA, EFF, IFP and other opposition parties, are threatenin­g fire and brimstone if President Cyril Ramaphosa signs it into law. Some say they will take the matter to the courts.

The ball is now firmly in Ramaphosa’s court. What will he do? What must he do? This monumental decision and political hot potato have been in the making for the past decade or so.

In its 2010 Durban National General Council, the ANC passed a resolution committing itself to changing South Africa’s health system from its current two-tier form to universal health access.

Ramaphosa has no choice but to sign off on the bill, according to Cosatu, because “the NHI is an ANC policy mandate, not some seasonal slogan”.

Furthermor­e, it added: “The majority of workers are in support of an NHI … that will guarantee quality, accessible and affordable universal health coverage for all South Africans.”

With the 2024 elections coming up, the ANC cannot afford to alienate its chief ally, Cosatu. Nor can it simply abandon a plan that is designed to rid the country of an unequal health-care system that discrimina­tes on race, class, gender, nationalit­y and geographic­al lines.

The dysfunctio­nal and underfunde­d public health sector serves about 85% of people, while only about 15% of South Africans are members of private medical aid schemes and enjoy much better service.

The coincidenc­e of race and class in South Africa means that most of those who suffered exploitati­on, oppression and poor health-care services under apartheid continue to do so.

It is not just the long queues and poor treatment they receive in public clinics and hospitals that workingcla­ss people complain about; it is that the results are often unnecessar­y and avoidable deaths. Indeed, in the townships they call the biggest hospital in the country, Chris Hani Baragwanat­h Hospital, the “slaghuis” (slaughterh­ouse).

Many families must exert themselves persuading sick relatives, especially the elderly, to agree to be admitted to hospital because they fear that to sleep there is a death sentence.

Despite the visible hardship and suffering caused by the two-tier healthcare system, people resist the NHI largely because of a history of privilege and entitlemen­t underpinne­d by racism and classism.

Dr Nicholas Crisp, deputy directorge­neral in the Health Department, once quipped: “You’ll get the lady in Dainfern who can’t handle the fact that she may end up in the same ward as her gardener from Diepsloot.”

Crisp believes that South Africa has two parallel health systems, public and private, “neither of which are functionin­g well … the one just looks prettier than the other”.

Indeed, the commodific­ation of medicines and their unregulate­d market arguably results in what amounts to price gouging by the private healthcare sector. There is poor regulation of a hugely fragmented system characteri­sed by 76 different medical schemes whose administra­tion makes it expensive to run.

Those who enjoy private health care, despite its shortcomin­gs, dread the thought of using dilapidate­d and poorly run public health-care facilities. Unfortunat­ely, it is policymake­rs, profession­als, businesspe­ople, and other leading members of society who enjoy private health care but are arguably doing very little to alleviate the suffering of the millions who are subjected to the public system.

In one of its better moments, the EFF was once inspired to make its members of Parliament commit themselves to the Sankara Code whereby politician­s and civil servants eschew the private and use public services.

The logic is that those with the power and knowledge, instead of being cushioned by privatisat­ion, will be compelled to improve public services to the benefit of all because they, too, use them.

Deprivatio­n of quality health care because of a person’s socio-economic status is what the NHI seeks to eradicate. It seeks to create one public health fund that will meet the needs of the entire population – not just a selected few.

There must be universal health coverage in South Africa, irrespecti­ve of how rich or poor you are and whether you live in a rural or urban area. The cost of health care, which is among the highest in the world, must be significan­tly reduced.

If successful­ly implemente­d, the NHI will cover the costs of medical care in the same way medical aids do for their members, without paying a fee.

There is an urgent need to reduce the inequality in the standards of health care enjoyed by people. The NHIhas an inbuilt solidarity mechanism whereby the rich subsidise the poor andthe privileged share with the deprived.

Ramaphosa has no choice but to sign the NHI Bill into law. Not doing so would be a betrayal of the working class and the poor. It would condemn millions to unnecessar­y death, illness and suffering. He must not bend to the will of those who have no problem with enjoying a good life amid hardship and suffering.

The shortcomin­gs they point out in the bill can be sorted out later and they are, in any case, excuses by people who fear change. Things must change. Change is pain.

 ?? TREVOR NGWANE ?? Director of the Centre for Sociologic­al Research and Practice at the University of Johannesbu­rg
TREVOR NGWANE Director of the Centre for Sociologic­al Research and Practice at the University of Johannesbu­rg

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