By JAINDI KISERO
Truth be told, what the National Hospital Insurance
Fund (NHIF) is offering under the new plan is very attractive from the
standpoint of a sick person looking for a competitive health insurance
plan.
Where else do you get the benefits package the new plan is offering for the new NHIF premiums?
On
offer is an out-patient deal giving you unlimited general consultation,
unlimited diagnosis and treatment of common ailments, unlimited
prescribed drugs, unlimited laboratory tests, and much more.
Mark you, the maximum premium under the new scheme is Sh24,000 a year.
The
fact of the matter is the following: If you allow wananchi to enjoy
this deal for six months, you will not be able to roll it back.
We
must remember that we have a new constitutional dispensation that is
going to imbue the ordinary citizen with a bloated sense of entitlement
and rights over services, especially what is stipulated as basic
rights.
Under the new dispensation, health is a basic human right.
But I still think that the new plan is being implemented poorly by the
management of the NHIF.
In the first place, the salary brackets
on the basis of which the premiums have been set are based on an
outdated actuarial study. The rates have been set by a study conducted
way back in 2007.
I don’t claim to be an authority on health
insurance or actuarial sciences, but in terms of proportionate
increases, it is clear that the contribution rates at both the top and
bottom ends of the salary brackets as spelt out by the NHIF are just too
high.
Clearly, these contribution rates were not arrived at
scientifically. Why is the management of the fund in a hurry to
implement the new contribution rates without conducting thorough and
scientific studies?.
Mark you, the Ministry of Medical Services,
with the support of the International Finance Corporation of the World
Bank, has just commissioned Deloitte and Touche to conduct a
comprehensive diagnostic study on the NHIF.
This is a study
involving multiple consultants, finance specialists, actuarial
scientists, health management professionals, insurance specialists and
economists.
Why can’t the NHIF wait for the results of the study so that it reach contribution rates based on scientific findings?
The
case for reviewing NHIF’s contribution rates cannot be gainsaid. It
does not make sense to keep contribution rates at artificially low rates
in a context where medical costs are rising by the day.
The case
for expanding the benefits regime is even stronger. We are not the first
to introduce out-patient cover in this region.
Tanzania’s NHIF provides cover for out-patient services.
In
addition it pays for you a proportion of your total medical expenses
contrary to our situation where the NHIF only pays for you a fraction of
your bill for the hospital bed.
But let us not put the cart
before the horse. The NHIF must undergo a total overhaul in its
management and governance before it can be allowed to handle the type of
money it wants to collect from the people.
I have just looked at NHIF’s latest accounts and what is revealed is a thoroughly mismanaged fund.
According
to the accounts, reserves accumulated over the years have now reached
Sh13 billion. Was this fund created to accumulate surpluses or to pay
hospital bills for members?
NHIF collected Sh5 billion in
contributions. Out of this, a colossal Sh1.4 billion went into paying
salaries with another Sh925 million going towards administrative
expenses.
Then there is the issue of corporate governance.
Why does the government persist in treating the NHIF as if it owns this private members club?
All
those political appointees on the board of the NHIF should be chucked
out and the fund be put under a corporate governance regime similar to
occupational pension funds, where the party who collects and keeps the
funds is separate from the person who manages and invests the money.
The
NHIF is made to play multiple roles – collecting the money, deciding on
which hospitals to accredit, verifying and paying. Ideally, the NHIF
should be run by trustees.
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