The Citizen (Gauteng)

Parties’ prescripti­ons for SA

PROMISES: HOW ANC, DA, EFF WILL FIX AILING HEALTH SYSTEM IF ELECTED, OR RE-ELECTED Analysts predict system sits on the verge of collapse.

- Kyle Zeeman – kylez@citizen.co.za

With this week’s signing of the National Health Insurance (NHI) Bill into law, the issue of health has again shot into politician­s’ pre-election speeches.

President Cyril Ramaphosa signed the Bill on Wednesday, to much applause and criticism.

The Bill aims to provide free universal health care to all South Africans. It comes amid reports of dilapidati­on, neglect and dayslong waits at state hospitals and clinics.

As analysts predict the health system sits on the verge of collapse, political parties have promised several reforms.

This is what the three biggest parties in the country say they will implement if elected, or re-elected:

ANC: NHI, AI AND ONE MEDICAL RECORD

Among the ruling party’s key priorities is to “ensure health care for all”. It said this would be achieved by implementi­ng the NHI within five years.

“Over the next five years, the ANC will strengthen youth health services, including access to sanitary towels for girls and young women, making them available in schools, universiti­es and other public spaces,” its manifesto added.

It will also create a single electronic health record so healthcare workers can get informatio­n about patients wherever the person goes for help.

The ANC said it will collaborat­e with other countries on the research and developmen­t of traditiona­l medicine, and use new technologi­es like telemedici­ne and artificial intelligen­ce in health care.

DA: UNIVERSAL MEDICAL CARE AND REFORMED MEDICAL SCHEMES

The Democratic Alliance said it “will rescue South Africans from a failing public health system” by “ensuring quality healthcare for all, irrespecti­ve of economic status”.

It called for universal health care but said the NHI was not the way to do it.

“Despite decades of failure, the national government’s proposed solution to deliver quality public health care for millions of South Africans is based on the misguided belief that the only way to ensure quality health care is by centralisi­ng all health care system functions through its National Health Insurance plan.

“State control opens the door to maladminis­tration and wholesale corruption. The populist proposals in the NHI risk bankruptin­g the fiscus and deepening the health care system crisis.

“The DA is committed to universal access to health care for all. The key to achieving this over the next five years is to make the current district management model work through governance reform.

“We argue that by leveraging the strengths of the private sector in partnershi­p with the public sector,” its manifesto reads.

It aims to introduce social reinsuranc­e for medical schemes.

“The solution to pooling problems in private health insurance markets is to establish schemes that can transfer the risks that individual insurers find difficult to cover. Instead of relying on private companies for this (reinsuranc­e), a publicly run programme will be establishe­d. All primary insurers (medical schemes) would need to be a part of this programme.

“This method ensures that we maintain the regular insurance market but still achieve the goal of bringing together risks into one larger insurance fund. This will function as a public secondary insurer. Social reinsuranc­e works by reimbursin­g actual expenses for expensive medical claims after they occur.”

It also aims to introduce a risk-equalisati­on strategy for medical schemes.

“Risk equalisati­on plans involve transferri­ng funds between health insurance plans to adjust for the expected costs of medical care.

“This is done in advance and is based on the average costs for a set of essential services for a population. The goal is to treat all insurance plans as if they are part of one large fund.

“This helps prevent individual plans from favouring healthier individual­s over those with higher risks. Instead, it encourages insurers to focus on managing costs and providing quality coverage to compete with other plans.

“This means that high-risk customers will have more benefits at a reduced cost, and medical schemes will still be profitable.”

It also plans to create postretire­ment protection for pensioners to get life-long coverage and an income cross-subsidy, based on a person’s income.

It aims to create investigat­ion units and watchdogs to eradicate corruption, while “developing a national health workers plan to identify skill shortages and to ensure we have sufficient doctors, nurses and administra­tors”.

It also wants to create a national prescripti­on registry to give patients access to their prescripti­on medication­s nationwide.

EFF: 24-HOUR CLINICS, CANNABIS AND TRADITIONA­L MEDICINE

Health is also a priority for the Economic Freedom Fighters.

Among its plans is for all clinics in South Africa to be open 24 hours a day, and health care facilities in all schools and varsity residences. It has a 70-point plan on health in its manifesto, based on three pillars.

“The EFF government’s approach to health care will be based on the pillars of prevention, promotion and education on health care,” it said.

Among the key promises are vaccinatio­ns for all citizens, more and better ambulance services, internatio­nal collaborat­ion on health care, and exploring the usage of cannabis for pharmaceut­ical and medical purposes.

“The EFF will also pursue the integratio­n of African medicine in primary health care that will include the rich bio flora which can be explored for research and product developmen­t,” it added.

To accompany this aim, the EFF plans to create a fund to support traditiona­l health practition­ers and build consulting rooms for traditiona­l and indigenous health workers, including traditiona­l healers and herbalists, in all district hospitals.

It said it will work with the SABC to produce health education programmes and create a health profile database for all citizens. Post-sexual trauma units will be in all hospitals and run 24 hours a day.

“The EFF government will upgrade hospitals such that each district in South Africa has a specialist hospital with a minimum of 450 beds, open 24 hours a day, with internal medicine, paediatric­s, obstetrics, gynaecolog­y and general surgeons, trauma teams, mental health and drug detox and rehabilita­tion centres, LGBTIQA specific healthcare, and palliative health services.

“The EFF will build specialise­d hospitals for the following disease categories: paediatric hospital, dental hospital, and multi-drug resistant tuberculos­is and tuberculos­is hospital.

“It will also establish specialise­d units for: diabetes, mellitus, cerebrovas­cular diseases, heart disease, hypertensi­ve diseases, chronic lower respirator­y diseases, oncology, rare diseases, sexual and reproducti­ve health, and chronic renal failure.”

It added it would increase the number of doctors and nurses, and fight racism and discrimina­tion in the system.

 ?? Picture: Michel Bega ?? BILL OF HEALTH. The National Health Insurance Bill comes amid reports of dilapidati­on, neglect and days-long waits at state hospitals and clinics. This raises questions on what will the health system look like in five years’ time.
Picture: Michel Bega BILL OF HEALTH. The National Health Insurance Bill comes amid reports of dilapidati­on, neglect and days-long waits at state hospitals and clinics. This raises questions on what will the health system look like in five years’ time.
 ?? Picture: Neil McCartney ?? BOLD MOVE. ANC president Cyril Ramaphosa.
Picture: Neil McCartney BOLD MOVE. ANC president Cyril Ramaphosa.
 ?? Picture: Neil McCartney ?? RESCUE MISSION. DA leader John Steenhuise­n.
Picture: Neil McCartney RESCUE MISSION. DA leader John Steenhuise­n.
 ?? Picture: Jacques Nelles ?? VISIONARY. EFF leader Julius Malema.
Picture: Jacques Nelles VISIONARY. EFF leader Julius Malema.

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