PEOPLE looking for health insurance coverage for private care will have more to choose from when a sixth player joins the Integrated Shield Plan (IP) market.
The Straits Times understands that AXA Life Insurance Singapore will be given the go-ahead from the Government soon to offer its range of hospital coverage with premiums payable with Medisave.
About two in three of the 3.9 million Singaporeans and permanent residents here have IPs. These are for coverage of treatments at private hospitals, and public hospital classes A and B1.
Applauding the move, Professor Euston Quah, head of Department of Economics at Nanyang Technological University, said: “It is important to have more players to raise the number of choices and to increase competition among the players.”
But Associate Professor Phua Kai Hong, of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore, said private insurance will only drive up healthcare costs.
He asked: “Is it desirable to have more people opting for private insurance when it is marketed extensively and perceived that subsidised care is inadequate?”
There are currently 26 IPs provided by five insurers.
Seven of the IPs no longer accept new members.
If AXA offers one plan for each category – namely, private, A1 and the standard B1 plan that all insurers have to offer from May – it will bring the total number of IPs that are still recruiting to 22.
These plans are called IPs because they have to integrate the basic national health insurance MediShield Life, as part of their plans.
This means that part of the premiums they collect is passed on to the Central Provident Fund Board, which runs MediShield Life, a scheme targeted at subsidised care in public hospitals. When patients make claims, part of the payout comes from MediShield Life.
Today, the amount of premiums charged by different insurers can vary significantly.
For more expensive plans for older people, the difference in premiums can be almost $3,000 a year.
This could be as some insurers have a far larger share of the pie than others, and can spread the risk over a larger pool of members.
As a newcomer, AXA is expected to price its products competitively to grab as much of the market as quickly as possible. Historically, premiums go up every couple of years to reflect higher healthcare costs.
The market is gearing up for another round of premium rises expected towards the end of this year, when the one-year moratorium on premium increases following the introduction of MediShield Life on Nov 1 last year expires.
salma@sph.com.sg
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