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30% jump in Class C hospital bills since 2006 - Lucky Tan

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http://singaporemind.blogspot.com/2011/01/30-jump-in-class-c-hospital-bills-since.html

Saturday, January 08, 2011
30% jump in Class C hospital bills since 2006.

"The Ministry of Health (MOH) puts this down to multiple factors - including a greater number of more ill and older patients, and patients asking for non-subsidised drugs and implants." - Straits Times 8 Jan 2011.
Is the MOH blaming the rising cost on the old and sick? Didn't the govt implement means testing that would have caused the hospital bills to escalate? Didn't the govt plan to make Singapore a medical hub for rich foreigners causing a strain on our resources and cost to spiral up?

In an earlier posting, I pointed out that the Medisave Minimum Sum has been raised at an annual rate of roughly 7%[earlier posting here] - that translate to a rise of about 30% for 4 years. When I posted that, I speculated that the increase may be linked to rising cost of medical care in Singapore and this is a concern because it is rising much faster than wages. Based on the figures released by the MOH, class C bills have increased 30% in 4 years. If you look at the average bill across all ward classes and hospitals we see a jump of more than 50%. The bills at a few of the hospitals have doubled. Look at the table below:

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Minister Khaw had this to say about the massive increase in medical cost:

"The bottom line : We have good high-standard public hospitals that are affordable because of the 3Ms" - Minister Khaw
Affordable? In the same sense as Minister Mah when he said housing is still affordable after prices jumped by 60% in 2 years? As for the 3Ms, it is full of holes. Many self-employed individuals don't have Medisave, hundreds of thousands are not insured[Link] and for you to get Medi-fund you have to exhaust all your savings, live in a home and have kw enough income to pass the criteria for receiving Medifund. It is more dangerous for Minister Khaw to say that medical care is affordable than for Minister Mah to say that HDB flats is affordable. For HDB flats, everyone knows the truth but for medical care many don't know what is going on until they get seriously ill ....then it is too late. There many holes and gaps that people can fall through. Take Medishield, many people are still on Basic Medishield. Basic Medisheld has limited payout for hospitalization/surgery that is now insufficient for the 'catastrophic illnesses' it is designed for because hospitalization cost has escalated. In 2005, Enhanced Medishield was introduced. However, many people developed various pre-existing conditions or are not aware and didn't upgrade to the new insurance. The word "enhanced" is actually misleading because it gives people the impression that it is unnecessary. It is essential for you to move to Enhanced Medishield because Basic Medishield is inadequate and will expose you to great financial risk. In fact Basic Medishield no longer offered to new insurance applicants. Please double check your Medishield policy to make sure you're on Enhance Medishield. Even Enhance Medishield has cracks you can fall through. Under Enhance Medishield there is co-payment amount that you have to exceed before Enhance Medishield will pay you. You may think that paying a few thousand from your pocket is okay, however, many patients, especially those with early cancer, found out the hard way that certain illnesses require many short hospital stays and you end up paying more than a few tens of thousands. To fix this you need to purchase a rider to cover the co-payment amount - which is another crack in the scheme that people are not aware of.

When Minister Khaw had a heart attack and needed surgery, he paid $8. Many poor people will pay much more than $8 when they get hospitalized. In our system, the richest in our society like Minister Khaw pay less than the poorer members because they can afford better insurance i.e. the less financially well-off have to shoulder heavier burdens when they get sick. Minister Khaw should make the medical coverage he has universal for all Singaporeans. We already have the biggest income gap among developed countries and our healthcare system further exacerbates the inequality in our society.
 
http://singaporedesk.blogspot.com/2011/01/if-you-can-pay-you-can-afford-it.html

Saturday, January 8, 2011

If You Can Pay, You Can Afford It

hospital+bills+small.jpg


Everybody knows about the $8 bill Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan paid for his surgical bypass. What we don't know is whether he had lobotomy done on the side to take advantage of the special rates he seems to enjoy. How else to account for his comment on the report that the average bill for a subsidised C-class patient has almost doubled in the four years since 2006? "The bottom line: We have good high-standard public hospitals that are affordable because of the 3Ms, " he said, referring to Medisave, Medishield and Medifund.

That's like Development Minister Mah Bow Tan saying HDB housing is affordable since a 25-year-old can always take out a 30 year loan. Never mind if he discovers decades later, at age 55, there's nothing left for retirement.

Khaw claims the majority have no difficulty in paying their bills, and four out of five of them are able to use Medishield and Medisave to cover the whole bill. There are good reasons why Singaporeans pay up bills: 1) the authorities will not hesitate to haul them up to court, 2) the loan sharks will spray paint their house-gates for free. And if it comes to jumping in front of the MRT tracks, you betcha LTA will make the surviving kin pay for messing up their shiny trains. When one guy decided to leap out of a hospital window while waiting his turn for a scan, he wasn't mentally disturbed as one reporter wrote. In all probability, the nightmare of a horrendous hospital bill may have contributed to his choice of drastic measures.

Asked to comment on the issue, unionist and fellow PAP MP Halimah Yacob would only call for healthcare costs to stay affordable and for the poor to have access to the various help schemes, a lame but politically correct response to a gross social injustice.
 
There're two flaws in the article.

1. Self-employeds do have to contribute to Medisave. If they find ways to escape, then blame who?

2. Make medical insurance like what Khaw Boon Wan has available to everybody? It is already available to everybody insurable. Just sign up and pay the premium. What? You expect it to be free?

Actually, medical insurance is the root of all evils in the ever-upward spiralling medical costs. In ancient and medieval times, before medical insurance was invented, whoever heard of unaffordable medical costs and doctor millionnaires. Doctors may be saviours but no angels or philantrophists. The more you can afford, the more they'd charge you. The more the general patients' market is insured for, the more they'd raise their charges. How do you think they become millionnaires? By printing money like a mint?
 
The more you can afford, the more they'd charge you. The more the general patients' market is insured for, the more they'd raise their charges. How do you think they become millionnaires? By printing money like a mint?

I wonder if Sultan of Brunei paid the medical bills of the relative who died in Spore:confused:

I forgot what the Spore doctor's bill was, it was only a couple of million $$$:rolleyes:
 
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