Title: Social Health Insurance Policy Development
1Social Health Insurance Policy Development
2Presentation
- Policy process to date
- Constitutional mandate
- Policy context
- WHO Ranking
- Key objectives
- Future policy options
3Policy Process
- 1994 Finance Committee
- 1995 National Health Insurance Committee
- 1997 Departmental Task Team
- 2000 Social Security Committee of Inquiry
- Health Subcommittee
- Dept/Council workshops
- Research
- WATP
- Financing research
- Stakeholder reviews
4Constitution
- Everyone has the right to have access to health
care services, including reproductive health care
(ss27(1)) - The state must take reasonable legislative and
other measures, within available resources, to
achieve the progressive realization of these
rights (ss27(2)) - No-one may be refused emergency medical treatment
(ss27(3))
5Current Policy Context
- Public sector
- Private sector
6(No Transcript)
7Per Capita Public Health Expenditure 1996/97 to
2000/2001
Source Department of Health (NHA)
8Public sector
- Link between policy and implementation
- Centralized responsibility and accountability
- Flawed user fee system
- Declining budgets
- Impossible to address inequity
9Private Sector
- Systematic cost increases due to fee-for-service
- Tax subsidy
- Residual risk selection
- Residual adverse selection
- Difficulties in linking to public sector
- Evolving low-cost market limited due to high
private hospital costs - Intermediary problems
10Medical Scheme Reimbursement of Public and
Private Hospitals 1988 to 1999 (1995 prices)
Source Council for Medical Schemes
11Per capita health expenditure/outcomes (WHO)
12Research Findings
- Conditional support for SHI
- Improve the public hospitals
- Critical to address inequities
- Ensure additional funding goes to health
- Differential amenities, not clinical services
- Injection of funds into public system
13National Health Insurance
- Only becomes feasible over time
- Is not a substitute for SHI but an end result
- Universal systems only exist in industrialized
countries - Middle-income countries typically combine
tax-funded, contributory systems, and regulated
voluntary environments
14Key Objectives of Proposed Reforms
- Attract additional resources to social risk pools
- Tax funding
- Contributory (voluntary and mandatory)
- Entrench systems of cross subsidy
- Income-based (equity)
- Risk-based
- Reinforce public provider system
- Decentralize hospital management
- Basic essential services
- Restructure budgeting system
15Phase 1 Development of enabling environment
Phase 2 Implement preparatory reforms
Phase 3 Implement statutory mandates
Phase 4 Implement national health insurance
16Development of Enabling Environment
- Preparation of public health budget system
- Centralization of health budget
- Create unit to manage conditional grants
- Preparation of public hospital system
- Management decentralization
- Coherent enhanced amenities policy
- Financial injection to improve public services
- Creation of minimum norms and standards
- Human resource management improvement
- Consolidation of medical scheme reforms
- Expansion of prescribed minimum benefits
- Review of savings accounts, benefit options and
late joiner penalties - Mandatory membership for restricted schemes
- Improved regulation of intermediaries
- Development of policy on universally accessible
basic essential services - Development of integrated subsidy system
- Revise the tax subsidy
- review risk equalization
- Implement private sector cost containment
measures
17Implement preparatory reforms
- Introduce the risk equalization fund
- Implement the revised tax subsidy
- Mandatory cover for civil servants
- State-sponsored medical scheme
18Implement statutory mandates
- Mandate medical scheme membership
- Apply only to high income groups
- Implement voluntary cover for low-income groups
- Move towards pre-payment system for public
hospitals - Pre-payment allows access to enhanced amenities
- Non-contributors still entitled to free services
19Final Implementation of National Health Insurance
- Universal coverage
- Choice of provider still available
- Private providers funded via medical schemes
- Public providers funded mainly via Public Sector
Contributory Fund, but also free to contract with
medical schemes for additional revenue - Central Equity Fund to allocate the reformed per
capita tax subsidy to medical schemes and to the
Public sector Contributory Fund - Central Equity Fund to allocate revenue from risk
equalization contributions back to medical
schemes, according to their risk profile
20Universal Mandatory contribution
Tax subsidy
Central Equity Fund
Public Sector Contributory Fund
Medical Schemes
Public Health Service Basic Amenities
Public Health Service Enhanced Amenities
Private Health Services
21THE END