How NHI will affect you

brogan

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Dear Doctor

This article by Helena Wasserman below was published on fin24.com on 11 October 2010.


How NHI will affect you

NATIONAL health insurance (NHI) looks set to cure at least one ill: hypochondria.
The new universal healthcare system may affect you in many ways. For some people, it could hike medical costs considerably, while for others it could curb the tendency to run to health specialists for every ache and pain.

Last month, the ANC gave momentum to the NHI process, announcing when it will be implemented (starting 2012, phased in over 14 years) and giving some indication on how it will be funded (your pocket).
While the NHI has come under heavy criticism, there is consensus that healthcare in SA needs an overhaul.

According to a recent report in the SA Medical Journal, about 8.5% of SA's gross domestic product (GDP) is spent on health.
About 5% of GDP goes towards the 7 million people in private healthcare, while 3.5% caters for the other 41 million people.

The ANC's plan is to give everyone free, improved healthcare.
If you earn an income, you will be required to pay a percentage as an "NHI tax". Other taxes, including a hike in VAT, are also on the cards. Tax deductions for medical contributions – currently worth R10bn to R15bn a year – will be phased out.

Government plans to spend billions on revamping hospitals and aims to fill all vacant posts in the public health system by 2012, but private hospitals are also expected to be contracted in to provide NHI services. Some doctors in private healthcare may be accredited with the NHI to treat patients.
You can also choose to remain a member of a medical scheme, but you will still have to pay the NHI tax and will lose your tax deductions on contributions.

While there still are huge uncertainties, particularly over the role of the private sector, there are some steps you can take to safeguard yourself against NHI fallout.

1. Start saving

You should consider putting money away now to make provision for the NHI's impact on your finances, says Len Deacon, CEO of the Topmed medical scheme. Deacon, a former head of Anglo American's medical scheme and is also an independent consultant, expects the NHI to certainly hike healthcare costs for many people.
Currently, it looks like a dedicated NHI tax of between 3.5% and 5% will be levied on your salary from 2012.

On a salary of R20 000 that could be under R1 000 – similar to what most people would be paying now for a comprehensive option, says Heidi Kruger, spokesperson for the Board of Healthcare Funders, a body which represents medical schemes.

However, other taxes, including VAT, will also be hiked to fund the NHI. Also, tax allowances on medical aid contributions will be scrapped. One study has suggested that the income tax rate for high income earners will climb from 41% to 45%.

This makes it important to invest an additional amount to make sure you have enough savings to tide you over, should you decide to remain a medical scheme member and face a squeeze on your disposable income.

2. Take a look at your medical aid

While most medical scheme members will try to cling to their membership ("out of fear of dying in a state hospital"), it is expected that those with lower incomes will be driven out of medical aids because they won't be able to afford them, says Dr Peter Breitenbach, a healthcare analyst at the global consulting firm Frost & Sullivan.

According to an estimate of the University of Cape Town, 40% of medical scheme members will give up their membership and rely on state services only.
However, Deacon thinks that a bigger number of employed individuals will hold onto their medical scheme memberships, if they can afford the cost.

"It is (now) clear that the NHI will be based on the public health system and way of treating patients. This means that strict referrals from nurses to GPs and only then to specialists will be adhered to. Also, it is clear the benefits will be very different to what medical scheme members have been used to.

"Initially the service standards will not be the same in the public system as patients have been used to in the private sector. Over time with the 10-point plan of the department of health it is hoped this will change," Deacon adds. (The plan includes improving infrastructure and management in state health.)
Still, he expects that the number of medical schemes will shrink from more than a hundred currently to about 30 in the next 10 years.

Some of the big closed schemes (provided by employers) are expected to get involved in the administration of the NHI, while "open" medical schemes may create new top-up products (medical aid that will only give you cover for certain illnesses, like cancer).

Smaller, marginal medical schemes may be squeezed out in the process, begging the question whether their members should jump ship now and join a bigger scheme, where they can build up a membership track record.
Kruger doesn't think this is necessary and says the NHI will be phased in gradually over a number of years.

3. Identify your own risk

Top-up medical cover is expected to be an integral part of the NHI, although it remains to be seen whether medical schemes' actuarial models will show that is viable, says Breitenbach.
For example, you may be able to buy "top up" which will pay out for cancer treatment.

It may be worth your while to study your family history to see what diseases you may be prone to. Hereditary illnesses include asthma, multiple sclerosis, cancer, diabetes, heart disease, hypertension and obesity. This will allow you to make an informed decision about which extra cover you would need under the new system. (Make sure you already have sufficient benefits for these high risk illnesses in your current medical scheme.)

It is likely that there will be room for top-up cover to also provide for "nice-to-haves" not included in the NHI benefit package, says Kruger. An example of this could be orthodontics.

4. Change your medical mindset

The NHI will bring a much larger focus on preventative and primary medical care with greater use of clinics, midwives and GPs, while specialists will only be accessed through a strict referral system.

This will force many medical scheme members, who currently think nothing of visits to specialists like paediatricians or gynaecologists, to change their way of thinking about what really requires specialist attention.

If your current GP, specialist or dentist receives NHI accreditation to treat state patients, their workloads are expected to increase dramatically and this will have an impact on your waiting time for treatment.
The same is true for an NHI-accredited private hospital, which will have to make changes to handle increased workflow.
For example, those who consider themselves too posh to push may be in for a shock.

At 65%, SA private healthcare has one of the highest rates of caesarian sections in the world. The global average is below 20%.
The rocketing rate of C-sections in SA has been blamed on the package of minimum benefits medical schemes are required to provide by law, which includes the procedure.

However, the NHI looks set to change this, forcing pregnant women to use midwives as a first port of call, and giving access to specialists in very specific circumstances.

5. Take responsibility for your own health

It will be more important than ever to take care of yourself and avoid unnecessary health risks.
Some of the most common diseases in SA are hypertension, obesity and diabetes – all of which may be prevented, says Kruger.
Investing in lifestyle changes now may save you a lot of money later.
 
Yes, that's right you rat-****s. Go on taxing everyone until there's nothing left to steal. See how well that worked out for other countries historically. Oh, wait that's right, The ANC doesn't beleive in history. They make it up as they go along. Screw learning from other people's mistakes.
 
OMG...if the 5% tax on my salary is correct, I wont be able to afford both the NHI and my Medical Aid. :-(

You're lucky, I can barely afford my crappy medical aid as it is. Now we're going to have to pay our money for Juju's gang of revolutionaries(retards) who keep on reproducing and AIDSifying each other as well. Isn't this country becoming more and more awesome each day?
 
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The problem with a percentage based system is that everyone will pay hugely different amounts but each person is entitled to the same care.

If someone pays 2k because they earn 40k a month. And another guy pays 200 because he earns 4k a month. Both have the same right to care, but there is an obvious gap in how much each contributes. Added to the fact is that someone earning 40k could be far healthier due to vitamin suppliments, gym memberships etc... So there is a much higher chance that the guy earning 4k is actually getting 2k's worth of care, and the guy earning 40k is actually getting R200 worth of care per month on average. Not a fair system at all really.

The UK have it right and we should adopt the same if we want it to work here. In the UK they pay a minimum amount per week of 80 pounds or so. Then you pay an extra 0.01 pounds or 1 pence per x amount earned. It changes the amount payed in the same scenario by about 100 Rand or so at most. So one person would pay lets say 600 and the other would pay 700. A lot more fair.

This pure percentage based scale is devised to ensure that the middle class continues to take the brunt for, and pays for the poor. With enough left over to line the pockets of the corrupt leaders of course.
Base amount plus 0.5% on every rand earned above R3000 would be much more fair than a flat 5% of every rand earned. But then again our government has not shown much interest in fairness before, so why start now.
 
OMG...if the 5% tax on my salary is correct, I wont be able to afford both the NHI and my Medical Aid. :-(

Yes, it will be one or the other and if you can afford it both already informed my wife that we will have to cut Medical Aid by next year or just insure certain ailments with medical aid the rest will have to come from government.
 
Initially the service standards will not be the same in the public system as patients have been used to in the private sector. Over time with the 10-point plan of the department of health it is hoped this will change," Deacon adds.

So what's the ANC's track record with regards to raising the standards of institutions under their control?
 
I'll be gone before they implement this :D

I also hope so too... by December I should have a new passport :D and not a new "green mamba" as the SA one is called... Very sad really but I am being forced out of here to survive.

On a salary of R20 000 that could be under R1 000 – similar to what most people would be paying now for a comprehensive option, says Heidi Kruger, spokesperson for the Board of Healthcare Funders, a body which represents medical schemes.

Another delusional spokesperson... comprehensive medical aid for a family of 3 costs just over R4,000 a month now!
 
The government can't manage to keep the roads in a state of reasonable repair, yet people are happy they can manage the health care of nearly 50 million people? Right...
 
huh? I hope you mean per month!

Nope per week. It is quite expensive when you look at it. But it does not just cover medical aid. It covers Medical, unimployment insurance (Doll: not sure how to spell it tbh :) ), Retirement etc.... So it covers a lot.
People are often misslead when it comes to the taxes etc... in the UK. NI (National insurance) covers the above mentioned things. Tax covers all the things that tax should cover. The difference though is that the NI actually works over there. The model that the SA government wants to implement is almost identical except in the way that they want the public to pay for it as I showed above it is quite unfair.
The issue that SA has is that our current hospitals are rubbish and so the NHI in this country will literally kill people. I am not overexagerating, it literally will. They cant handle the current number of people, what makes em think they can manage 50 million.

On a happier personal note, I am leaving in April already. Have dual citizenship with the UK and have had since birth. I have been holding out here trying to make it work, but finally I have done the math and I will have so much more free cash a month over there to spend on my family and myself. In light of many of the current implementations or proposed implementations: Road tolls, NHI, BEE, AA, etc... I just cant justify putting my family in a weakened position for love of the country and its weather.
 
5% plus a hike in VAT and abolishing the tax breaks for medical contributions?

Are these monkeys completely nuts... that will practically break me and I won't even have to choose between Medical Aid and NHI tax.. I'll have to choose between my homeloan and NHI.. and my budget has "fat" in it.... I wonder about the people who's budget has no "fat" in it.
 
If this NHI is implemented then we can all say "Bye Bye South Africa". This country cannot survive such a system, not on the current demographics. Puts that 60 million rand private hospital for use of the president, his best buddies and visiting VIPs into perspective; they know how this will turn out and are planning for their future.

Forget Zimbabwe 2, think more like North Korea 2.
 
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