NHI News South Africa

Subscribe

Elections 2024

Siviwe Gwarube tells us why the DA could help South Africa succeed!

Siviwe Gwarube tells us why the DA could help South Africa succeed!

sona.co.za

Advertise your job ad
    Search jobs

    SAHPC fights back against voting in of NHI Bill, despite objections

    The South African Health Professionals Collaboration (SAHPC) - a newly formed national group of nine medical and allied healthcare practitioners’ associations representing more than 25,000 dedicated private and public-sector healthcare workers - is disappointed that the National Council of Provinces (NCOP) Committee on Health and Social Services has not made any amendments to the NHI Bill.
    Source:
    Source: Pexels

    It also says the NCOP Committee failed to adequately consult, or consider submissions made by numerous clinician bodies, whose primary objective is to safeguard the future of healthcare in the country.

    This follows the NCOP Select Committee on health and social services’ final vote on the NHI Bill on Tuesday, 21 November 2023, where, despite objections, eight of the nine provinces voted in favour of the NHI Bill.

    It appears that comments and recommendations were not sufficiently taken into account in the final committee vote and therefore, the SAHPC urges the NCOP plenary to send the Bill back to the Committee on procedural grounds, when it votes on the NHI Bill on 29 November.

    The SAHPC, which includes family medicine GPs, specialist doctors, dentists, and allied healthcare workers, is deeply concerned about the unintended consequences that are likely to arise from the hasty adoption of the NHI Bill in its current format.

    The potential consequences of rushing through the NHI Bill without critical amendments are far-reaching and will further undermine the country’s ability to deliver quality healthcare to the very patients it seeks to protect.

    The SAHPC does not believe that this version of the Bill is in the best interest of patients, who are at the heart of any healthcare system. The Bill will also have severe repercussions for the economy and the country’s long-term economic sustainability.

    A call for stakeholder consultation

    Simon Strachan, a spokesperson for the SAHPC says: "The NHI Bill recommends a complete overhaul of the country’s healthcare sector. While reforms to the public and private healthcare sectors are urgently needed, there is too much at stake for the country’s healthcare system to get the NHI wrong.

    “We are concerned that the Bill’s hasty progression through the legislative process, without taking into account the diverse perspectives and expert insights delivered through numerous prior expert submissions, is a lost opportunity to put the country on a pathway to quality healthcare for all.”

    In the same way that healthcare workers’ primary responsibility is to their patients, we believe that Parliament’s chief responsibility is to the people of our country. This required thorough interrogation of the NHI Bill to ensure that the final product is workable, affordable, and that it improves the quality and sustainability of available care. We do not believe that the Bill, in its current format, achieves this.

    The SAHPC remains committed to collaborating with policymakers and stakeholders to contribute valuable insights that will shape a healthcare system that serves the best interests of every South African.

    Let's do Biz