The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Nip the rot in the bud at PSMAS

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PSMAS issues continue to hog the limelight with various actions being taken in a bid to restore sanity to the beleaguere­d medical aid society. The medical aid society has lost signi cant credibilit­y in the eyes of its clients who have struggled to access basic medical care in the country. There are nauseating reports of maladminis­tration, corruption and general male cence which have gone for too long without a solid remedy. The consequenc­es have been drastic with closure of many units under Premier Service Medical Investment­s. The burden is transferre­d to the patients, many of them are civil servants whose meagre salaries are pathetical­ly eroded by the sky-rocketing in ation. Service providers have for long been grumbling about PSMAS as the medical aid society has perenniall­y failed to honour its payment obligation­s. Despite the fact that the medical aid society has often failed to pay its dues, many service providers have audaciousl­y continued to attend to PSMAS patients. Many medical practition­ers have been forced o business with resultant migration to greener pastures.

The last few weeks saw many service providers being summoned by police for alleged fraud involving PSMAS claims. Medical practition­ers are hauled before the courts charged with fraud arising from using incorrect tari codes for the claims. According to investigat­ors, it is criminal to use a wrong code for claims and someone has to face justice. One has to understand that there are many numerous tari codes for claims and it is very easy to pick the wrong one because some of the codes are interchang­eable. Some tari codes are so confusing that one may fail to understand the meaning of the claims, making it illogical to deem it criminal. I thought the impasse would need mere engagement with all the involved service providers and not the irrational hostility of prosecutio­n yet the same PSMAS could go for months without paying the service providers. The money PSMAS claims to have been prejudiced by service providers does not contribute to more than 3% of the total loss. Money was abused at PSMAS by executives who ventured into mining, gold buying, farming while some of them awarded themselves hefty perks which included exquisite holidays, top-of-the range cars and expensive houses. Prosecutin­g a service provider who is said to have prejudiced PSMAS of just US$4 000 is a mere act of scapegoati­ng.

PSMAS should know that the service providers that are tormented today are dedicated cadres who stood with the medical aid society when many rejected its card holders. Will the service providers feel safe in future when they wake up to nd police o cers standing in front of their doors because of alleged fraud which is said to have been committed in 2019? How many medical practition­ers will continue to accept PSMAS in view of such calamitous reaction by the medical aid society? The action by PSMAS will one day come to haunt it as I foresee extensive snubbing by service providers. Will other organisati­ons, other than government rms, join PSMAS as a health insurer yet service providers will not accept the medical aid society card holders?

Government is the biggest contributo­r to PSMAS with civil servants being covered under the medical aid society.

The root causes of PSMAS demise should be nipped in the bud and appropriat­e action should be taken to bring order. It is sensible for government to whip PSMAS management into line for the betterment of the members who have su ered for too long.

Meritocrac­y should be number one priority at the organisati­on. Those who are not quali ed to be holding o ces should surely be sent home. There should be no room for nepotism and favouritis­m

Good corporate governance should be available at PSMAS so that issues of transparen­cy, accountabi­lity and integrity are observed.

Prosecutio­n of those implicated in corruption should be expeditiou­sly done in order to bring con dence to clients

Service provider-medical aid relations should be upscaled as many service providers have lost faith in PSMAS. There is no one who wants to liquidate because the medical aid society does not pay within the stipulated 90 days. The harassment of service providers should stop if the medical aid society hopes to have good societal standing.

PSMAS should be kept under check as it has the biggest potential to become the best medical aid society, alas, the opposite is happening today.

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