Activists call for ‘real action’ on healthcare crisis
Ahead of President Cyril Ramaphosa’s state of the nation address on Thursday, health activists have called on him to take concrete action to fix the health system rather than focusing on the national health insurance (NHI) scheme.
The ANC-led government has been pushing for NHI since 2009, but has yet to drive through any reform to breathe life into the policy, which aims to provide everyone with free health services.
“SA has been on the brink of major health system change for almost a decade. NHI has been discussed for years and made less tangible with each iteration of the policy,” said lobby group Section 27, referring to the three NHI policy papers published by the government.
The first legislative steps towards establishing NHI are contained in the National Health Insurance Bill, which was published for public comment last June. The bill paves the way for the establishment of an NHI fund that will purchase services from accredited public and private sector providers.
Section 27 said the government had become fixated on the National Health Insurance Bill, at the expense of fixing the health system. “The creation of a fund does not itself improve the health system. The fund needs a system to buy services from. We do not have that system,” it said.
Section 27 welcomed that the Special Investigations Unit was expediting investigations and prosecutions in the health sector, and the appointment of more public health care workers as part of the president’s economic stimulus package. But it said more needed to be done.
“We cannot afford to stop at a few interventions and the passage of a bill. We call for real action to fix the health system,” Stop killing babies and their mothers through health system failure,” it said.
However, SA’s biggest trade union federation, Cosatu, said its members wanted to see more rapid progress on NHI.
“Our nurses, doctors and health workers need to see the government get serious about building the foundations for the NHI and fast-tracking its realisation. Yet all they see is austerity, having to work 48-hour shifts, lack of basic medicines and security, growing queues and poor infrastructure,” spokesperson Mathew Parks said.