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Registrar and CEO of Council of Medical Schemes dies

ZokufaThe Council for Medical Schemes registrar and CEO, Dr Humphrey Zokufa, has died on after a short illness, reports Business Day.

He was an outspoken pharmacist-turned-health administrator whose career spanned the public and private sector.

He spent 11 years at the helm of the Board of Healthcare Funders (BHF), an association representing the interests of medical schemes and their administrators, before becoming registrar of the CMS in November.

The report says his appointment by Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi was controversial, as he effectively moved from player to referee, but in his characteristically good-natured style, he shrugged off his critics.

While he was MD of the BHF Zokufa led a high-profile court case challenging the CMS over its interpretation of regulation 8 to the Medical Schemes Act, which governs payment for prescribed minimum benefits (PMBs). The CMS maintained that medical schemes must pay for PMBs in full, regardless of what healthcare providers charged, while the BHF had lobbied to get such payments capped at rates determined by schemes.

The report says his sudden death leaves the CMS’s board confronting the question of whether it must recruit a new registrar from scratch, or whether it can make a recommendation to the minister based on the candidates it scrutinised in 2016. That issue will be discussed at a meeting, likely to be convened ahead of the board’s next gathering in late February, according to council chair Yosuf Veriava.

The industry will be keenly watching to see if the new registrar is as openly supportive of the minister’s plans for the National Health Insurance as Zokufa was, and the extent to which they seek to protect the industry and its 8.8m medical scheme beneficiaries.

CMS chief financial officer Daniel Lehutjo is to take up the role of acting registrar, a position he held for more than two years prior to Zokufa’s appointment.

Prior to working at the BHF, Zokufa was registrar of the Medicines Control Council and worked in the Department of Health as its chief director for pharmaceutical policy and planning.

He is survived by his wife Thandi, his son and three daughters.

 

Zokufa outlined his vision for medical aids supplementing the National Health Insurance Scheme in a Rapport interview published hours before his death.

He spoke passionately about the NHI White Paper and how a universal healthcare system was attainable and feasible. Zofuka said the estimated cost for the NHI was R360bn – and Road Accident Fund levies and medical scheme contributions already amounted to R300bn, meaning the system was affordable.

Zofuka said medical aid schemes need urgent reforms as the 8m South Africans currently belonging to schemes continue to pay above-inflation increases while their benefits are eroded each year.

[link url="http://www.businesslive.co.za/bd/national/health/2017-01-24-loss-of-humphrey-zokufa-leaves-gap-in-health-sector/"]Business Day report[/link]
[link url="http://www.netwerk24.com/Sake/Ekonomie/nuwe-regulasies-vir-verkryging-20170123"]Rapport interview (subscription needed)[/link]

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