Deadlock continues over cashless facility to patients
September 9th, 2010 - 5:15 pm ICT by IANSNew Delhi, Sep 9 (IANS) The deadlock between insurance companies and hospitals over cashless treatment under health insurance policies is continuing, even though the regulator claims that the issue is getting resolved.
“The differences continue. I would say there is zero consensus on the issue,” Analjit Singh, chairman of Max India Ltd, told reporters here Thursday.
He said cost of medical treatment has risen sharply in the past few years and it has to be passed on to customers.
“The real issue is of cost. If you want better treatment and facilities, you have to pay more,” Singh added.
However, Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDA) chairman J. Hari Narayan said the issue of cashless treatment facilities would be resolved soon.
“The problem is with certain group of hospitals. I am hopeful it will be resolved soon,” said Narayan.
Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of a CII event, he said the regulator is discussing the matter with various stakeholders.
Narayan claimed over 400 hospitals were now providing cashless treatment as compared to nearly 300 prior to the dispute. “Denying treatment is technically wrong. It is morally wrong. We have to resolve the issue as soon as possible,” he added.
Apollo Hospitals Group chairman Pratap C. Reddy also said the issue is far from over.
“Somebody has to bear the cost. The current structure is not sustainable,” said Reddy, adding the government might be required to partly cover the cost of providing health insurance to the needy.
Reddy emphasised the need for bringing more people under insurance cover, and said it would reduce cost for hospitals as well as insurance companies.
Planning Commission Deputy Chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia said the government is targeting to bring 60 million people under the health insurance cover. Currently, less than 10 million people have health insurance. This figure is very low when compared with the health insurance coverage in the developed countries.
Reddy said nearly Rs.50,000 crore annual investment was needed over a decade to ensure good quality healthcare to the common people in India.
From April 1, four public sector general insurance companies, commanding around 45 per cent of the market share, withdrew cashless services at all hospitals and migrated to a preferred provider network.
- Health insurance cashless dispute getting resolved: IRDA - Aug 20, 2010
- Court wants cashless medical facility restored - Aug 10, 2010
- 'Withdrawal of cashless health treatment retrograde' - Jul 10, 2010
- Policy-holders to be told about alternate hospitals - Aug 25, 2010
- IRDA asks general insurers to avoid unhealthy competition - Dec 16, 2011
- ICICI Lombard to insure 3.5 lakh homes in Goa - Jun 13, 2011
- Highest net asset value cover plans are risky: IRDA chief - Sep 15, 2011
- Court bars foreign insurer's agent from selling policies - Sep 26, 2010
- State-run insurers not to withdraw cashless reimbursement - Aug 17, 2010
- Analjit Singh to be non-executive chairman of Vodafone India - Feb 10, 2012
- IPO norms to be out once valuation method is finalised: IRDA chief - Sep 15, 2011
- Public sector insurers to push for a common claims settling agency - Jul 11, 2010
- Court notice on insurance for AIDS patients - May 12, 2011
- Insurance regulator to meet, brief life insurers on flaws - Jan 11, 2011
- Insurance regulator bracing for spat with judiciary - Feb 14, 2011
Tags: 10 million, 60 million, apollo hospitals, deadlock, deputy chairman, group chairman, health insurance, health insurance policies, india ltd, insurance companies, insurance regulatory and development authority, irda, max india, medical treatment, montek singh ahluwalia, narayan, planning commission, pratap, sidelines, stakeholders