Summary
- Gross premiums in the medical class dropped 0.71 per cent to Sh38.42 billion in 2017 from Sh38.7 billion a year earlier, the industry’s annual report showed, reflecting the impact of enhanced benefits by the NHIF.
- Association of Kenya Insurers (AKI), the industry lobby which compiled the data based on audited financial statements, has attributed the dip in medical insurance cover to competition from the social insurer, which is being readied for the planned universal healthcare by 2022.
Uptake of medical cover in private insurers dropped for the
first time in history last year, fresh industry statistics indicate,
condemning growth in non-life insurance business to a 16-year low.
Gross
premiums in the medical class dropped 0.71 per cent to Sh38.42 billion
in 2017 from Sh38.7 billion a year earlier, the industry’s annual report
showed, reflecting the impact of enhanced benefits by the National
Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF).
Association of Kenya
Insurers (AKI), the industry lobby which compiled the data based on
audited financial statements, has attributed the dip in medical
insurance cover to competition from the social insurer, which is being
readied for the planned universal healthcare by 2022.
“NHIF
has come out very aggressively in tapping into the same market where
private insurers have been playing. The moment NHIF expands its benefit
package and the cost is cheaper, you would expect that a good number of
people who will probably be going to private medical insurers are likely
to get attracted to NHIF,” AKI chief executive Tom Gichuhi said.
“We
didn’t know the impact that NHIF will have until we prepared those
numbers.” Mr Gichuhi said the industry had started looking for new
strategies on its medical cover offering and pricing to stave off the
rising competition from NHIF. The State-run social medical scheme has in
the past few years enhanced the out-patient benefit package and is now
covering consultation in low-end facilities, lab tests, drugs, and
ultrasound and imaging services such as MRI and CT scans.
No comments:
Post a Comment