A lobby group has called for the adoption of an integrated
insurance data system to throw out fake medical and motor insurance
claims that have made the cost of insurance unbearable.
Insurance
Institute of Kenya (IIK) Director Caroline Munene said the Sh324
million lost through fraud in the past ten months, meant insurance
companies would enhance premium payments to remain afloat with the cost
passed on to clients.
“An integrated
information-sharing platform among insurance companies and hospitals is
very welcome as it will completely wipe out fraudulent multiple claims
by same individuals on the same accident to different insurance
companies,” she said.
Mrs Munene said that prompt
reporting via an online portal on insured clients’ admission to
hospitals to insurance companies, would also reduce incidences where
false claims made by individual hospitals, without a patient’s
knowledge, are forwarded for payment.
“Medical policy
premiums amounted to Sh25 billion but the claims and the operational
costs surpassed this amount. It hardly helps anyone since Kenyans suffer
as many insurance companies will not be willing to provide private
health financing,” she said.
IIK, she said, had
launched an intensive insurance clients’ sensitisation campaign that
will demand that all insured people scrutinise their medical bills
before payment is effected, thereby, helping reduce inclusion of costly
services, procedures and drugs that have not been rendered.
In an interview with the Nation, Mrs
Munene, who is also the AAR Insurance managing Director said that Kenya
was witnessing growth of the insurance sector albeit slowly due to lack
of adequate professionals.
In a survey released by
KPMG mid this year, fraudulent claims were blamed for high premiums in
Kenya that had gone up by 25 per cent.
KPMG Associate
Director James Norman said Kenya had the potential to reverse the trend
due to willingness by insurance companies and policyholders to report
and share data relating to the malpractice.
No comments :
Post a Comment