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Health Technology Assessment in Support of National Health Insurance in South Africa

Authors :
Maryke Wilkinson
Andrew Lofts Gray
Roger Wiseman
Tamara Kredo
Karen Cohen
Jacqui Miot
Mark Blecher
Paul Ruff
Yasmina Johnson
Mladen Poluta
Shelley McGee
Trudy D Leong
Mark Brand
Fatima Suleman
Esnath Maramba
Marc Blockman
Janine Jugathpal
Susan Cleary
Noluthando Nematswerani
Sarvashni Moodliar
Andy Parrish
Khadija K Jamaloodien
Tienie Stander
Kim MacQuilkan
Nicholas Crisp
Thomas Wilkinson
Source :
International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care. 38
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2022.

Abstract

South Africa has embarked on major health policy reform to deliver universal health coverage through the establishment of National Health Insurance (NHI). The aim is to improve access, remove financial barriers to care, and enhance care quality. Health technology assessment (HTA) is explicitly identified in the proposed NHI legislation and will have a prominent role in informing decisions about adoption and access to health interventions and technologies. The specific arrangements and approach to HTA in support of this legislation are yet to be determined. Although there is currently no formal national HTA institution in South Africa, there are several processes in both the public and private healthcare sectors that use elements of HTA to varying extents to inform access and resource allocation decisions. Institutions performing HTAs or related activities in South Africa include the National and Provincial Departments of Health, National Treasury, National Health Laboratory Service, Council for Medical Schemes, medical scheme administrators, managed care organizations, academic or research institutions, clinical societies and associations, pharmaceutical and devices companies, private consultancies, and private sector hospital groups. Existing fragmented HTA processes should coordinate and conform to a standardized, fit-for-purpose process and structure that can usefully inform priority setting under NHI and for other decision makers. This transformation will require comprehensive and inclusive planning with dedicated funding and regulation, and provision of strong oversight mechanisms and leadership.

Details

ISSN :
14716348 and 02664623
Volume :
38
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fd1b6b612b1af35242c3e80e2f1ba46d