Welcome to The Health Citizen, an information portal with valuable insights on the National Health Insurance (NHI) and its impact on all consumers of health services in South Africa – ‘The Health Citizens’.
The Health Citizen platform is dedicated to bridging the gap between complex healthcare policies and your everyday life, ensuring all have access to vital information and is empowered to navigate the changing healthcare landscape, and understand how these changes might impact your health services; access; coverage, benefits, and overall healthcare experience. Regardless of whether you’re availing private or public health services, our team of experts is committed to offering accurate and current perspectives on NHI, its role within the wider health system, and its potential effects on you both in the present and future.
6 December 2023
What is Universal Health Coverage and its link to National Health Insurance?
Universal health coverage (UHC) refers to a healthcare system in which all individuals (health citizens) have access to essential health services without suffering financial hardship.
The 64th World Health Assembly emphasised the need for UHC, and the United Nations General Assembly endorsed a resolution on Global Health and Foreign Policy, urging countries to accelerate progress towards UHC.
Achieving UHC requires a combination of adequate healthcare financing, a well-functioning healthcare system, access to essential medicines and technologies, a trained healthcare workforce, and robust governance and accountability mechanisms.
What is National Health Insurance and how does it work?
South Africa, as with many countries, is committed to achieving the global goal of Universal Health Coverage (UHC) by 2030, leaving no one behind.
National Health Insurance (NHI) is a healthcare financing system that can be used to support the achievement of UHC in a country. However, NHI is not a necessity to achieve UHC. While the structure and details of NHI can vary greatly between countries, the key aim remains to promote the achievement of UHC, ensuring that everyone in the population can access the healthcare they need without suffering financial hardship.
Currently, patients using either the public or private healthcare systems face many challenges when accessing healthcare. Patients accessing non-hospital-based services in the public sector…
South Africa is introducing NHI to improve access to healthcare, while reducing inequity and inefficiency in both public and private sectors.
The NHI Bill was passed by the National Assembly on 13 June 2023. The next step for the NHI Bill is for it to be passed by the National Council of Provinces (NCOP).
The Bill sets out many transitional arrangements that have to be made for the implementation of NHI. During this transitional period, medical schemes will continue to provide all their members with the same health care benefits as they do now.
It is important to note that there are many uncertainties surrounding the financing and implementation of NHI in South Africa. It is an entirely new development, and there are still many lessons to be learned.
Medical schemes will continue to support the government in the implementation of UHC to ensure that the health system supports all citizens equitably and fairly. Your medical scheme membership will not be adversely impacted in the immediate future, as both the White Paper and NHI Bill emphasise that the role of medical schemes will only change when NHI is fully implemented. The NHI Bill acknowledges that there is still a role for medical schemes even after the NHI is implemented.
It may take several weeks before the NCOP finalises its deliberations and adopts the NHI Bill. Additionally, it will take some time before the NHI Bill becomes law and many years before it is fully implemented.
The Bill currently states that, when fully implemented, medical schemes will not be able to provide cover for services that are paid for by NHI. Since we don’t know what these services are yet, we cannot say what medical schemes will not be allowed to cover them.
Medical schemes will be able to fund health care services not covered or paid for by the NHI Fund for various reasons. At this stage, these reasons may include where a person is not registered with the NHI Fund, where a person does not follow prescribed referral pathways to obtain NHI-funded care, where a person uses a provider who is not accredited and contracted to the NHI Fund, where the Formulary for the NHI Fund does not include a particular medicine prescribed for a user, etc. The NHI Bill contains information gaps that will have to be filled in by regulations made by the Minister, so more clarity will be achieved as time goes on.
The Health Citizen, an information portal with valuable insights on National Health Insurance (NHI) and its impact on ‘’the health citizen’’ – all consumers of health services in South Africa.
Whether you’re a medical scheme member seeking information on NHI implementation timelines, its effect on medical scheme, or a member of the public looking to understand the broader impact of NHI on healthcare services, The Health Citizen is dedicated to bridging the gap between complex healthcare policies and your everyday life.
Our main goal is to ensure that everyone has access to pertinent information and empower you with the knowledge to navigate a rapidly changing healthcare landscape, as well as understand how these changes may impact your coverage, benefits, and overall healthcare experience.
It is important to note that the NHI journey will continue to evolve as the implementation of NHI progresses and further developments are made.