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| Just 8.8 million of South Africa's 56 million people have access to private medical care (AFP Photo/MARCO LONGARI) |
Pretoria (AFP) - South Africa on Thursday unveiled details of a new universal health insurance plan aimed at improving healthcare for the poor in one of the world's most unequal nations.
A new
National Health Insurance (NHI) scheme will use compulsory contributions from
employers and employees and is expected to be operational by 2026, Health
Minister Aaron Motsoaledi told a news conference.
He said the
changes were necessary to close the gap between wealthy South Africans, who
have access to excellent private care, and the poor who are dependent on often
understaffed and under-resourced public facilities.
"All
South African citizens must have access to private and public health
care," said Motsoaledi.
"The
cost of private health care is out of reach."
Just 8.8
million of South Africa's 56 million people have access to private medical care
with the rest entirely dependent on the state.
Motsoaledi
said South Africa spends 4.5 percent of GDP on private care for 16 percent of
people while the public sector spends 4.2 percent of GDP looking after 84
percent of the population.
"The
rich must subsidise the poor, the young must subsidise the old and the healthy
must subsidise the sick," he said.
Motsoaledi
said that would require "massive reorganisation" of both public and
private care as he presented a series of bills to be debated by parliament.
The cost of
the new scheme will likely fall on taxpayers, employers and the private medical
insurance industry.
"We
have privatised health care more than the US," said the minister, adding
that South Africa had been "completely out of sync with the rest of the
world".
The
dramatic shakeup comes at a time of intense crisis in the public healthcare
system which is battling doctor shortages, industrial turmoil and growing
waiting lists.
"(We
are) very much alive to the problems of poor quality and lack of efficiency in
the public health care system," said Motsoaledi.

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