Aaron MotsoalediThe launch of the much-delayed National Health Insurance (NHI) White Paper – the most radical health reform in South Africa’s history – was rather shambolic. It happened on Friday, tagged onto the end of the post-Cabinet briefing in which an irritable Jeff Radebe dodged questions about the removal of the Finance Minister. The video link between Pretoria and Cape Town had technical problems. The Director-General of Health was out of the country.

Yet Health Minister Dr Aaron Motsoaledi soldiered valiantly on, presenting a plan that aims for all South Africans to be treated according to their health needs and not their bank balances.

Morally, there can be no argument against a fair and equitable health service. Accident victim Mrs A should not die while waiting at her clinic for a doctor who does not come, while Mrs B can go to a specialist when she has a cold simply because Mrs A has no medical aid and Mrs B does.

But marrying the two systems is going to be extremely hard and require buy-in from a wide variety of people who are not used to working together. The case for how this is to happen is not evident in the White Paper, which is a maze of financing models and unknowns.

Compulsory

The implementation of the NHI is a reflection of the kind of society we wish to live in: one based on the values of justice, fairness and social solidarity.”

In a nutshell, a central NHI Fund, financed by compulsory contributions from all citizens and permanent residents (and other rather vague means), will “buy” a basket of health services from accredited public and private health institutions, and private health practitioners. All citizens and permanent residents will be able to access these without further payment.

Private medical schemes will only be allowed to offer “complementary services” not provided by the NHI. This suggests that the view of COSATU and the SA Communist Party – that private medical aids should do little more than cover things like cosmetic surgery – has held sway in this, the 40th version of the White Paper.

“The implementation of the NHI is a reflection of the kind of society we wish to live in: one based on the values of justice, fairness and social solidarity,” according to the White Paper. “Healthcare should be seen as a social investment and should not be subjected to market forces where it is treated as a normal commodity of trade.”

Yesterday, the Democratic Alliance’s Wilmot James condemned the White Paper as “a breathtaking‚ high-handed and dangerous effort to socially re-engineer our dysfunctional health system (that could) could easily compromise rather than enhance the access citizens have to healthcare in our country”.

The intention is noble. But there are still big, fuzzy areas related to implementation. If government cannot get support from the private health sector – particularly the scarce specialists – our entire health system may be weakened as they leave for greener pastures.

However, the current system is neither fair nor just. Nocawa Dail died a few months back in Bongani Hospital in Welkom in the Free State after waiting for four days for a doctor to remove her dead baby. Hours after her almost full-term baby was finally removed, 21-year-old Dail bled to death. Yet in the same town, a woman on a private medical aid has easy access to a gynaecologist, even when she doesn’t need specialist attention.

Medical aid contributions take a substantial chunk out of many middle class household budgets, and the costs private providers often are often excessive. Yet it is precisely the horror stories like Dail’s that makes the average medical aid member keep paying expensive premiums. No one wants to be in Dail’s position – in desperate need of urgent care, yet kept waiting for so long because of a shortage of doctors, that you die.

Accreditation

Institutions won’t simply be paid “fees for service” because this does not ensure good quality of care or address health outcomes. Instead, payment will also be linked to health outcomes

The White Paper stresses that all institutions and health practitioners will have to be accredited to treat patients. Institutions will be inspected by the Office of Health Standards Compliance (OHSC), based on set criteria including infection control, patient safety and staff attitudes. Only those that are accredited by the OHSC will get money from the NHI Fund, which means that all employees will need to pull their weight otherwise their clinics and hospitals won’t get budgets and won’t be able to pay their salaries.

Under this system, perhaps Bongani Hospital, where Dail died, would fail to get accreditation – but would that mean that other hospitals in Welkom could cope with its patient load? What happens if the only hospital in a rural area fails to get accreditation?

All NHI providers will get contracts which will set out “performance expectations in respect of: patient management; patient volumes; quality of services delivered; adherence to clinical protocols and treatment guidelines and improved access to health services”, according to the White Paper.

Institutions won’t simply be paid “fees for service” because this does not ensure good quality of care or address health outcomes. Instead, payment will also be linked to health outcomes – but the definition of these is vague, too vague probably to save a Dail.

Everyone will have to start treatment at primary healthcare clinics – which will be a big adjustment for medical aid members who can just straight to specialists if they want to. Access to specialists will be rationed to those that need it.

Since 2012, 10 NHI pilot districts have been working on ways to improve primary healthcare and they have made some headway. But while progress has been made, huge weaknesses have also been unmasked. Attempts to contract private doctors to work in government clinics, for example, have failed in a number of districts because of the poor working conditions.

In Gert Sibande district in Mpumalanga, doctors reported anonymously that equipment was broken or missing, patient files were a mess and there was no district leadership to support them.“At the moment we have no drips at this clinic, meaning if a patient can come in here bleeding I won’t be able to help them,” said one doctor, who quit working for the district because it was impossible to give proper care.

Meanwhile, in Umzinyathi district in KwaZulu-Natal officials said that a number of GPs felt that the R381 hourly rate being offered by the department was too low so declined to work in the public sector.

Bottom up

It is hard to imagine how specialists, often in short supply even in public health, will be persuaded to work harder for less in a single health system – particularly if they are used to a certain income level.

A few months back, Professor Alex van der Heever from the School of Public and Development Management at Wits University called on government to restructure governance and boost primary healthcare services before introducing the NHI. “The government needs to start working from the bottom up. Right now they think that by centralising everything all the problems are resolved, but they are wrong,” he said, adding that if local clinics and hospitals were not empowered to take their own decisions, everything would fail.

The White Paper makes a strong case for why all South Africans need access to the facilities and health practitioners locked up in private care. But it does not make the case for how it will attract private practitioners to work for the NHI. Getting buy-in from private doctors and specialists is crucial if the NHI marriage of the public and private sector is to succeed. This is just one of the many questions that need to be answered as the NHI process unfolds.

Hours after the White Paper was released, it was not available on the health department’s website, an uneasy reminder that government bureaucracy complicates even some of the simplest tasks. – Health-e News.

An edited version of this story was also published on the Daily Maverick

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