Home Southern Africa SA’s Healthcare Player Netcare Pitches for Government Support to Upgrade Health Delivery

SA’s Healthcare Player Netcare Pitches for Government Support to Upgrade Health Delivery

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SA’s Healthcare Player Netcare Pitches for Government Support to Upgrade Health Delivery

(3 Minutes Read)

Despite its many desirable benefits, the high cost of private-sector medical and dental services remains a significant barrier for many South Africans. While the quality of care is often superior to that in the state-funded facilities, it is not accessible to everyone.

Private hospital group Netcare is proposing that business and the government extend their collaboration for kick-starting the economy to healthcare. They feel that this could quickly resolve some of the public sector’s most pressing problems, such as long waiting times for procedures and a shortage of training posts for doctors and nurses.

Business and the government launched a pact in June 2023 in which they agreed to work together to restore public and investor confidence by addressing constraints to economic growth in three key areas — energy, logistics, and crime and corruption. Netcare feels that an added dimension to is public-private sector cooperation to kickstart the sector.

Despite its many desirable benefits, the high cost of private-sector medical and dental services remains a significant barrier for many South Africans. While the quality of care is often superior to that in the state-funded facilities, it is not accessible to everyone.

Even the most cursory comparison of the two will reveal that both sectors have some significant pros and cons, and a patient’s choice is frequently governed purely by affordability. However, the choice of doctor can often play an equally important role in the decision. The following paragraphs will examine these and all the relevant decision-making factors in more detail.

However, in the continuing private healthcare vs public healthcare contest, the former contender is plagued by numerous challenges. Its hospitals and clinics are frequently severely under-resourced. Daily, they must contend with issues like a shortage of qualified staff and the lack of up-to-date medical equipment, leading to huge backlogs and waiting lists that often leave patients in pain and discomfort for a year or more while waiting for a relatively simple procedure.

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 Despite such challenges, public sector healthcare is not without its strengths. The government’s investment in the sector is continuing to grow, adding new options and expanding existing core services from primary to tertiary care and specialized treatments in high demand.  Furthermore, if a government proposal to introduce a contributory scheme like that used to fund Britain’s NHS is accepted, the decision could lead to greater parity in private healthcare vs public healthcare comparisons.