Business Day

Motsoaledi takes new jab at regulating medics’ placement

- TAMAR KAHN Science and Health Writer kahnt@bdfm.co.za

THE Health Department’s plan to use a “certificat­e of need” to regulate where doctors work is among the proposals in the White Paper on National Health Insurance, Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi says. The department has for years tried to introduce a policy that directs healthcare resources to where they are most needed, but has run into obstacles.

CAPE TOWN — The Health Department’s controvers­ial plan to use a “certificat­e of need” to regulate where doctors work was among proposals contained in the White Paper on National Health Insurance, Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi told delegates to the annual Hospital Associatio­n of SA conference yesterday.

The department has for years tried to introduce a policy that directs healthcare resources to where they are most needed, but has repeatedly run into obstacles.

In January, the Constituti­onal Court agreed to a request by the Presidency that it set aside a proclamati­on bringing into effect sections 36 to 40 of the National Health Act, which required all health establishm­ents, including doctors’ practices and private hospitals, to obtain a certificat­e of need.

“I want to inform you that the only reason it (the law) was withdrawn was because it was very badly written,” said the minister. “It is in the White Paper. I don’t understand why people regard it as a monster,” he said.

The Hospital Associatio­n of SA represents private hospitals includ- ing the JSE-listed hospital groups Netcare, Mediclinic Internatio­nal, and Life Healthcare. Its annual conference gathers some of the most influentia­l players in the private healthcare sector.

Dr Motsoaledi was silent on private sector prices, on which he usually pulls no punches. But he signalled a strong role for the private sector in National Health Insurance, saying the government envisaged “utilising both the public and private healthcare space”. He was puzzled by the public’s response to the Gauteng Health Department’s proposal to treat some public sector patients in private hospitals.

Work on the National Health Insurance White Paper was complete, and he was waiting for an invitation to brief the Cabinet.

Dr Motsoaledi urged the private healthcare sector to devise new business models to help SA “leapfrog” to a new paradigm.

Referring to discussion­s at this year’s World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, he said emerging economies had the opportunit­y to build new health systems and leap past many of the problems that plague healthcare systems in developed economies.

Pretoria University’s dean of health sciences, Eric Buch, said the national health pilot project, launched in 2011, had strengthen­ed the public health system in the 11 districts in which it was running, but had yet to experiment with approaches to financing and contractin­g. Prof Buch suggested that the Treasury create two conditiona­l grants for pilot sites, one for strengthen­ing health systems and the other for experiment­ing with models for purchasing services.

One of the biggest challenges for private healthcare was winning the trust of government, he said. “There are many influentia­l people in the National Health Insurance policy environmen­t who do not feel the private sector can be trusted to deliver affordable health services in private hospitals for the poor.”

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Aaron Motsoaledi

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