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Serious Bastard doctors cheat old folks of coffin money, MOH wayang on data collection

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http://www.todayonline.com/singapore/160-reports-overcharging-made-moh-each-year

By


Kenneth Cheng


[email protected]
.
Published: 4:00 AM, March 1, 2017

Updated: 11:58 AM, March 1, 2017



SINGAPORE — In the past two years, the Ministry of Health (MOH) received an annual average of about 160 submissions relating to feedback on overcharging.

Minister of State (Health) Lam Pin Min revealed this in Parliament yesterday, in reply to a question from Nee Soon GRC Member of Parliament (MP) Lee Bee Wah.



Among other things, Dr Lee had asked for the number of reports the MOH had received of patients being overcharged by doctors in private practice in the past five years.

Dr Lam noted that because of a change in the data-collection system and classification of bill-related feedback, the ministry could not compare yearly figures over the past five years accurately. He said the MOH learnt of 23 cases via email last year, and the bulk of them (90 per cent) were against private medical institutions, with the remainder against public healthcare institutions.

Contacted by TODAY, the MOH could not give a similar breakdown in relation to the total pieces of feedback it received on overcharging each year.

Dr Lee, meanwhile, said she had received feedback from residents that doctors issued non-standard drugs to Pioneer Generation patients, for which they have to pay out of their own pockets.

She asked if the MOH monitored the issuance of such drugs and if there were substitutes so this would not hit these patients’ pockets.

Responding, Dr Lam encouraged those who require non-standard drugs but cannot afford them to tap the Medication Assistance Fund to pay for costly non-standard medicines.

The MOH had set up the Agency for Care Effectiveness in 2015 to promote appropriate medical care.

Dr Lam noted that the agency would be issuing guidelines on cost-effective drugs for treating common medical ailments “in time to come”, without elaborating.

Nominated MP K Thanaletchimi asked whether the ministry was considering expandingthe role of community pharmacists to give them prescribing rights and to offer cost-effective medicines, while Sembawang GRC MP Vikram Nair suggested pharmacists could prescribe medicines for simple conditions.

On prescribing rights, Dr Lam said the MOH would have to seriously weigh their pros and cons, since it has received patient feedback that collecting prescriptive drugs directly from the doctor “adds a lot of convenience, rather than have (patients) travel to … a pharmacy”.

He pointed out that community pharmacists are already allowed to prescribe some drugs, such as those for the common cold and runny nose.
 
Doctors come from the top students in every cohort-so they know exactly what they are doing.
If some people can charge the highest salaries in the world why not doctors?
If LHL salary is much more than president of USA, should our doctor earn less than US doctors?-just arguing on logic alone!
 
Can't follow the logic. The salaries of our politician has nothing to do with logic. They have the numbers and decided on the figures and made it law.

How is a doctor going to charge high fees and survive based on his A levels of straight As and a medical degree? The ones who charge high fees are those that have a reputation and a track record.

The complaints are usually about taking advantage of a patient, over servicing , and over-charging. Nothing to do with their competency. Complaints to do with medical negligence is a whole different matter and the very best have been in hot soup. The current case involves a President Scholar and who was local oncologist for PM at the time of his discovery.

Doctors come from the top students in every cohort-so they know exactly what they are doing.
If some people can charge the highest salaries in the world why not doctors?
If LHL salary is much more than president of USA, should our doctor earn less than US doctors?-just arguing on logic alone!
 
Having worked in Singapore and Canada I can tell you separating prescribing from dispensing is the best way to avoid conflict of interest. But for convenience the jokers in Sinkies have no idea. Laziness trumps. Oh well.
 
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