Saturday Star

Watch out for gaps in your gap cover

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If you rely on gap cover to make up for shortfalls in your medical scheme cover, watch out for changes to your cover, which are being made in anticipati­on of new regulation­s that will govern gap-cover products.

Proposed regulation­s published in May 2014 have yet to be finalised and will not affect your gap cover in 2015, but some insurers are already implementi­ng changes in anticipati­on of the finalisati­on and implementa­tion of the regulation­s.

You must check the gaps in your healthcare cover and the cost of your cover, so study the informatio­n that your scheme and your insurer send you about your cover for 2015.

One healthcare broker says that, in 2014, the payment of many policyhold­ers’ claims was delayed by disputes over liability for claims relating to conditions covered by the prescribed minimum benefits (PMBs), and he warns that this is one area where insurers are making changes to gap-cover policies.

In May, National Treasury published the second draft of the demarcatio­n regulation­s under the Short Term Insurance and the Long Term Insurance Acts in another attempt to separate clearly what constitute­s the business of a medical scheme from that of health insurance, and to ensure that insurance does not undermine the cross-subsidisat­ion by young and healthy medical scheme members of older, sicker scheme members.

The first draft of the regulation­s, more than two years ago, proposed banning gap cover. The second draft provides for the continuati­on of gap cover for medical scheme members, but subject to an annual benefit limit of R50 000 per policyhold­er.

Currently, gap-cover policies cover the shortfall between what a specialist who treats you in hospital charges and what your scheme reimburses the specialist. The cover limits are well in excess of the highest claims.

Some policies also cover the co-payments your scheme may impose for certain procedures, such as scopes and scans, and some provide top-up cover for certain major medical expenses, such as oncology.

There has been a huge uptake of gap-cover policies, because the shortfall between what medical schemes pay and what specialist doctors charge has widened, and schemes have cut their benefits to contain the cost of contributi­ons.

The gap between what specialist­s charge and what schemes reimburse has grown because of the scarcity of specialist­s and the absence of guideline tariffs for their services.

IMPLEMENTA­TION DATE

National Treasury has received numerous submission­s on the second draft demarcatio­n regulation­s, which include proposals to ban products offering primary health care to lower-income earners and to limit hospital cash plans sold by insurers to benefits of R3 000 a day.

Reshma Sheoraj, National Treasury’s director of insurance in the financial sector policy unit, says Treasury, the Department of Health and other regulatory bodies are considerin­g concession­s in response to the public comments.

Sheoraj says it is likely that the final regulation­s will be published either before the end of the year or early in 2015, pending agreement among all the stakeholde­rs. Therefore, the earliest that the provisions in the regulation­s will come into force is January 2016, although one insurer believes January 2017 is more likely. Neverthele­ss, insurers have started making changes to their gap-cover products in anticipati­on of the regulatory changes.

Richard Eales, the executive director of Guardrisk Insurance, a large player in the gap-cover market, says the company will offer four Admed gap-cover policies in 2015. Three of these policies will have a design that is very similar to the one suggested in the draft demarcatio­n regulation­s.

The cheapest policy will not cover co-payments or shortfalls in PMB claims. It is 26- to 27-percent cheaper than the correspond­ing policy that does cover PMB claims, and it could lower premiums for existing policyhold­ers who choose it.

The PMBs are benefits that medical schemes must by law provide. They cover all medical emergencie­s, 270 conditions that if left untreated would threaten the quality of your life and 25 common chronic conditions. Schemes are obliged by law to cover your claims for PMB conditions in full, regardless of what your doctor or other healthcare provider charges.

However, schemes can appoint certain doctors or other healthcare providers, known as designated service providers (DSPs), and stipulate that you must use them in order for your PMB claims to be paid in full. If you do not, except in certain cases, such as an emergency, it is likely that you will have to pay a portion of the bill yourself.

PROBLEMS WITH PMB CLAIMS

Although schemes should pay PMB claims in full, many members face shortfalls, because they do not have the PMB treated according to the scheme’s rules, or because the claims are not coded properly by the healthcare provider and/or processed correctly by the scheme.

In the past, gap-cover policies have paid the shortfalls on all PMB claims, and Eales says one in three claims against Guardrisk’s gapcover policies is for a PMB.

Victor Crouser, the head of coastal at Alexander Forbes Healthcare, which provides healthcare cover advice to employer groups, says that, in 2014, Alexander Forbes was called on to deal with many gap-cover claims related to PMBs that were rejected, because the insurer took the view that the policyhold­er’s scheme should have paid the claim.

Crouser says schemes replied that the claims had been paid in line with their rules and the law, leaving consumers out of pocket. Insurers and medical schemes paid the claims only after the brokerage intervened.

Tiago de Carvalho, the managing director of Ambledown, which underwrite­s gap-cover policies marketed by Ambledown and Complimed, says many PMB claims are paid on Ambledown policies, but if the claim arises because members deliberate­ly do not use the scheme’s DSP, the insurer will not pay.

De Carvalho says there was a huge increase in Ambledown’s gapcover claims in 2013. Ambledown saw an average increase of 32 percent in the number of claims per policyhold­er, and the average amount of each claim increased by 25 percent. This has resulted in a rise in premiums, with increases as high as 36 percent on policies sold through brokers to individual­s, although in rands the increases are small, because gap-cover premiums are low – typically, R150 to R190 a month per person or family.

Some policyhold­ers have anti- selected against the insurer – they take out policies only when they know they are about to undergo surgery. As a result, the waiting periods for certain procedures, such as hip replacemen­ts and spinal surgery, have been increased to 12 months, De Carvalho says.

Michael Settas, the managing director of Xelus Specialise­d Risk Solutions, says Xelus’s gap-cover policies will not change until the regulation­s are promulgate­d.

The second draft demarcatio­n regulation­s propose a six-month waiting period for all health insurance benefits and no exclusions for pre-existing conditions. Currently, insurers can set any waiting period and can exclude cover for pre-existing conditions.

Eales says you should not expect a dramatic reduction in premiums if the R50 000 limit on claims is implemente­d. Although one claim on an Admed policy in 2014 was for R160 000, the average Admed gapcover claim is just over R4 800, and only 20 percent of claims each year are over R20 000. The cost of covering claims over R50 000 accounts for less than two percent of Admed policy premiums, he says.

The draft regulation­s also propose that policies be communityr­ated, as is the case with medical schemes. This means that all policyhold­ers will pay the same premium, regardless of their age or health status. Currently, most insurers apply a loading of 50 percent to premiums on policies sold to people over 70, and they set premiums for employer groups according to the risk the group poses.

De Carvalho says premiums will increase if the final regulation­s prevent insurers from risk-rating.

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