It is medical aid scheme renewal season and now is the time when you need all the advice you can get to make the right choices as you find yourself under massive pressure to cut costs, while ensuring access to quality private healthcare in a crisis.
“If you are a member of a medical aid scheme, you will have received notification of the increases to your contributions and benefit changes for 2023 by now. Some schemes announced that increases will be deferred to April 2023, while others announced increases averaging 6% and more from 1 January 2023,” says Martin Rimmer, CEO of Sirago Underwriting Managers.
He expects most increases to be in line with medical inflation which is usually around 3-4% above the consumer price index (CPI).
“Across the board, medical schemes saw an increase in the cost of care over the last year as benefit utilisation returns to pre-Covid levels, while hospital admission costs have increased by 21% compared to 2019 levels.”
Fundamentally, Rimmer says, we are heading into an extraordinarily challenging time and the need for financial prudence when it comes to your healthcare funding and access to quality private healthcare, has never been more critical.
“South Africans are under massive pressure to balance soaring living costs which have sky-rocketed in a hyper-inflationary economy with massive increases in the cost of living, food, fuel, electricity and coping with load-shedding. In many households, the cost of medical scheme membership is easily 30% of total monthly household income.”
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However, he says, it is simply non-negotiable to have medical aid scheme membership given the collapsing public healthcare system. The health ombud warned parliament that the public health sector is in such a dire state and work to raise standards is progressing so slowly that most facilities will not make the grade to provide services under National Health Insurance (NHI).
“Another reality is that, while medical scheme contributions increase every year in a bid to keep pace with healthcare hyperinflation, most medical scheme members will be paying more for the same or less medical scheme benefits and paying out a far greater percentage of out-of-pocket healthcare expenditure that is not covered by their medical scheme benefit, notably for members on core plans.”
Rimmer says the growing quantum of large gap claims values is a key indication of this growing buy-down trend. “While the average larger in-hospital gap claim is between R10 000 to R20 000, we are seeing the frequency of mega claims in excess of R40 000 on a daily basis for tariff shortfalls not covered by medical schemes that members would have to pay from their own pockets if they had no gap insurance.”
He points out that it is not only members on lower benefit options who face these shortfalls.
“Even on comprehensive medical scheme benefit options, medical scheme members face onerous tariff shortfalls for in-hospital procedures.”
Medical aid scheme members have until the beginning of December to make any changes to their medical scheme options for 2023. In the current environment, many members are looking to save on costs, while maintaining access to private healthcare. However, they have to consider many interconnected variables with any benefit or option change.
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Wesley Birch, an independent financial planner with Sam Goudvis & Associates, says factors such as your personal needs and health conditions and that of your dependants come into play, as well as your claims history, affordability, day-to-day spend and value for money.
He offers the following advice to consider when reviewing your medical scheme benefit option:
The most crucial aspect right now is to secure your healthcare solutions, such as medical scheme and gap cover benefits which will be fundamental to carrying you through a potential health crisis, which could possibly result in a significant financial conundrum, he says.
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