The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Sadc health care ridiculous . . .

- Timo Shihepo Correspond­ent Read the full article on www.herald.co.zw

CITIZENS from the Southern African Developmen­t Community (SADC) are being subjected to high medical fees when accessing health services in their neighbouri­ng countries, despite promises by the SADC Secretaria­t to standardis­e health fees in the region.

SADC also has a protocol on health, which says member states should promote, coordinate and support individual and collective efforts of state parties to attain an acceptable standard of health for all people.

But despite the protocol having been signed into an agreement in 1999, nothing concrete has surfaced, and foreign citizens continue to fork out huge sums of money for treatment.

The status quo is in direct contradict­ion with the regional body’s plans for regional integratio­n, which will translate into the free movement of people and goods plus services.

Apart from universal medical fees for the region and its citizens, SADC government­s also agreed to do away with roaming charges for SADC citizens. The aim was to remove deterrents to the regional integratio­n projects.

These noble initiative­s continue to remain unfulfille­d promises to the people of the region, while they continue to be classified as foreigners in their region. For example, in Namibia, a person from other SADC countries is required to pay around N$2 000 upfront when being hospitalis­ed in a government hospital, and once that initial payment is depleted, N$500 is required per day. In comparison, a Namibian is only charged N$30 one-off for the same services.

To use the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), non-Namibians are charged N$900 per day, while Namibians only have to pay the once off N$30.

The use of maternity and delivery services will see non-Namibians forking out N$400 per day.

“One has to pray that you don’t get ill while you are outside your own country and with the economy at home not doing well, it is becoming harder to afford these fees,” a patient from Angola said, as he walked out of Katutura Hospital in Windhoek.

In Botswana, while locals are charged about N$7 to be treated at a government hospital, foreigners from SADC are charged about R55 for consultati­on and over R200 for other services such as admission and medicines.

A foreign national in Zambia is charged 600 kwacha (N$791) per day for admission, while a local will be charged less than 100 kwacha (N$131).

The situation is even worse in South Africa where the government has begun the process of sending outstandin­g health bills for foreigners to their respective embassies because foreigners cannot afford to pay these fees. Although no fee structure was immediatel­y available, The Southern Times understand­s foreigners pay more than locals in that country.

According to reports, the Gauteng Health Department is on a mission to recoup N$160 million from foreign nationals. The Gauteng Health Department confirmed that embassies were sent letters indicating the amounts owed by their citizens. The health department owes service providers at least R5 billion, accumulate­d over two years.

Nationals from Zimbabwe and Malawi owe the largest chunk of N$144 million and N$11,6 million, respective­ly, in unpaid health bills. Nigeria is third on the list, with N$7,9 million in unpaid bills.

The practice of charging foreigners more than the locals for health services is also found in other SADC countries such as Zimbabwe, Malawi and Swaziland.

Responding to The Southern Times, the SADC Secretaria­t’s acting director of gender, social and human developmen­t, Lomthandaz­o Mavimbela, said the regional body is busy looking at ways to standardis­e these fees.

“Currently, it’s one of the areas we are looking at, how all citizens can pay the same fee for health services anywhere in the region, whether he or she is a citizen of that country or not. We must all have access to cheaper medicines,” she said.

She added that the SADC Secretaria­t has observed that different citizens are paying different fees but said this, however, does not happen at the borders because of SADC’s cross-border initiative.

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