Medinol December 2012 News Letter
The Medinol Brief – December 2012
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Latest News
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Western Cape Health has suspended all ties with the locum agency that provided a doctor who has been arrested on suspicion of raping a patient.
A Cape Times report says that doctor, employed in a Nyanga clinic, is 46-years old and the patient 26. She alleges the doctor raped her in his consultation room.
She informed the clinic manager and police were called. He is being held at the Nyanga police station and will appear in court once charged.
The report said Nyanga police spokesperson Ntomboxolo Sitshitshi would not confirm this on Monday night and referred the Cape Times to the provincial spokesperson.
Police spokesperson Noloyiso Rwexana confirmed that a suspect had been arrested for alleged rape and will appear in court. She would not confirm whether the suspect was a doctor.
The woman’s family said she was still too traumatised to talk about the incident, says aDaily Voice report.
Her 38-year-old sister said the young woman went to the healthcare centre on Monday after complaining of back pain. “She says she went in and explained what was wrong and he told her it might be discharge from a vaginal infection,” she said. “He told her to take off her tights and to lie down before he inserted his fingers into her for an examination. After taking out his fingers, he told her there was definitely some discharge and that he would need to remove it.
“He then told her to breathe in and out, to relax and when she still couldn’t, he told her to imagine she was having sex – a process which was supposed to relax her. When that didn’t work, he apparently started massaging her breast. Afterwards he told her to move and to close her eyes. He then took some cream and put his hand in there again. My sister says she got groggy and the next thing she knew this man was on top of her, raping her.”
The sister said she they are shocked a doctor could do this to his own patient.
“One usually expects rapes to happen while a person is walking alone at night or out at a tavern, not in your doctor’s rooms. We go to these places for help because we cannot afford private doctors but now this has scared us all. Something needs to be done about this, how are we to trust that the doctors in our clinics are not criminals because it’s never the same doctor, they come and go.”
Spokesperson for Western Cape Health Mark van Heever says the doctor in question was employed as a locum (temporary) doctor via an agency. “The department has since suspended all ties with the agency, pending the outcome of the investigation,” he said.
Van Heever is quoted in a News24 report as saying that the woman was getting trauma counselling and the department was helping the police with their investigation.
Source: Moneyweb.co.za
Health Professions Council of SA bows to pressure.
CAPE TOWN: In the face of strong opposition from the private medical industry as well as threats of legal action, and if necessary, mass protest, the Health Professions Council of SA will delay the publication of its controversial tariff guide.
Issued a week ago, the tariff guide sets out the pricing that private doctors, dentists and other specialists should charge for they work they do.
The guide was to have been gazetted on Friday August 17, but this will be delayed until after a meeting hosted by the HPC on the September 3.
The meeting will allow industry stakeholders like the SA Dental Association and the SA Medical Association to make presentations on the tariff guidelines.
Both organisations had fiercely criticised the guides for being out of touch with reality. The Council used the last published tariff guide – published by the Board of Healthcare Funders in 2006 – as its starting point for the new rates. It adjusted the rate by consumer price inflation, which is well below medical inflation. The older guides also did not include codes for hundreds of new procedures.
“The decision was taken by the Council president, who believed that pressing ahead with the tariffs as they are would destabilise the health industry,” says Council spokeswoman Bertha Scheepers.
The decision was welcomed by the health industry. “This [meeting] is what we asked for,” says acting chairman of the South African Medical Association, Mark Sonderup. “The tariff is not being gazetted which means it has no legal standing.”
The tariffs as they stand are completely inadequate, he says. “All we are asking for is an inclusive process that takes into account the arguments we have previously put forward. We don’t think that is unreasonable.”
Setting tariffs and charges is not a straightforward process. “People have this notion that doctors charge a fee and pocket the money. But in reality doctors are SME’s – they employ bookkeepers and receptionists; they buy equipment; they pay insurance, rates and taxes. Those are costs that must be properly accounted for.
“Getting the pricing right is fundamental,” he says. If they had not been heard, he says, health professionals would have resorted to mass action. “This is the way to go in SA in 2012. We would march on the HPC and demand. This is a serious issue – particularly as we move towards NHI.”
While Sonderup believes this is a genuine attempt by the HPC to hear the industry’s concerns, he questions whether setting pricing is the job of the Council – a statutory body charged with regulating the industry. “Is this not the job of the envisaged pricing commission?”
It is however a step in the right direction.
The ‘sword of Damacles’ hanging over the formation of a pricing commission is a 2003 decision handed down by the Competition Commission which prevents any type of tariff setting within the health industry. “It must go down as the worst ruling the competition authorities have ever made,” says Sonderup. “This is what has created the space for anyone to charge any price.”
Dental practice in Parklands requires permanent receptionist/chairside assistant. Must reside in the area. Experience essential. Experience with Medinol Practice Management Software a distinct advantage. Five-and-a-half day week. Competitive salary offered. Email CV to bpm@medinol.co.za or call 083 786 0503 for an appointment.
Dear Electronic Switch Houses/Bureau’s
Directors:
This letter serves as notification that Thebe Ya Bophelo Administrators and Providence Healthcare Risk Managers are merging on the 01st of January 2018. ThebeMed Medical Scheme will be moving to the Providence Healthcare Administration System as from the 01st of January 2018.
Please be advised that all future claims with a service date from 1 January 2018 onwards must be submitted to Providence Healthcare. All claims for 2017 and previous years must be submitted to Thebe Ya Bophelo Administrators, Thebe will continue to assess these claims on the MIP administration system till the end of April 2018.
ThebeMed Medical Scheme Options 2018:
The following Options are active for 2018 on ThebeMed Medical Scheme:
• Universal Option
• Universal Efficiency Discount Option (EDO)
• Energy Core Network Option
• Energy Medium Network Option
• Energy Open Network Option
• Fantasy Option (New Savings Option)
Membership Card Files:
Providence will provide daily membership card files from the 01st of January 2018.
Scheme Increase:
ThebeMed Medical Scheme Tariff will increase with 6% for 2018.
Managed Care Third Parties:
Medicine Claims
Please be advised that all future claims with a service date from 1st of January 2018 onwards must be submitted to Providence for Medicine Claims and not to Mediscor PBM. All claims prior the 01st of January 2018 must be submitted to Mediscor PBM.
Dental Claims
The scheme will continue to use DENIS for dental management and Preferred Provider Negotiators (PPN) for optical management for the claiming year of 2018.
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Date: 21 Apr 2017
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0181A – Being an all-inclusive Consultation plus Medicine tariff.
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