Health Minister Dr Zweli Mkhize called a press conference on Thursday morning in Pretoria to officially announce that the National Health Insurance (NHI) Bill is being handed to the National Assembly for debate.
You can watch his address and that of his associates live below, courtesy of broadcaster eNCA. The main changes planned for the NHI are also explained below this video.
It could already be law by July next year and is looking to improve healthcare for more than 80% of the population who are not covered by medical aid and generally don’t have access to superior private healthcare services.
The bill will be published for all South Africans to see during the course of this morning.
Laws governing the health system in South Africa are due to be vastly changed, with the full implementation of the new universal healthcare system set to be completed by 2026. Medical aids as they currently exist will also probably disappear, or at the very least be vastly changed.
The project is set to be one of the most expensive ever undertaken in South Africa, and government intends to introduce a single national pricing regimen for health services and fund it by increasing personal income tax (it uses the term “mandatory prepayment”) and employer tax, among other measures. Medical scheme tax credits that are currently still being paid to medical aid members will now also go towards funding the NHI instead.
The bill runs to 88 pages. It aims “to improve the quality of life of all citizens and to free the potential of each person”.
Government’s health fund will become the single purchaser of all healthcare services, to pool finances and strategically buy healthcare services, medicine and products from accredited service providers who will have to meet “high standards” in order to be reimbursed for their work.
Some big changes are coming
Patients will in future only be able to access specialist healthcare after accessing the primary healthcare system through a doctor or nurse.