Tell your clients to carry cash when they seek our services from Jan 24 – Private Health Facilities Association tells defaulting health insurance companies

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The Private Health Facilities Association of Ghana has asked clients of defaulting insurance companies to be prepared to pay cash for healthcare services when they visit their facilities from January 24.

The Association said the non-payment of debt owed it by private health insurance companies in the country is affecting their operations.

This is contained in a press release dated January 24 and jointly signed by Frank -Torblu, General Secretary and Richard Samuel Boakye Donkor, Vice President.

They have therefore given an ultimatum of February 14, after which they will adopt a radical approach to recovering the debt owed them.

“We hereby wish to state unreservedly that the insurance companies that have not met their claims payment obligations to service providers should do so within three weeks from now commencing 24th January, 2024 to 14th February, 2024. Within the three weeks, clients of these insurance companies are advised to carry money to pay for their services. Failure by these companies to honour their obligations as expected will attract a rather radical approach to remedy the situation,” they warned.

Health insurance companies owe us GHC152.3m – Private Health Facilities Association

“At the time of coming to the press, we had an average value of One Hundred and Fifty-Two Million, Three Hundred and Seventy-Eight Thousand, Five Hundred Ghana Cedis. (GHC152,378,500.00) as the outstanding liability. This figure does not represent the entire debt owed service providers but just a fraction of the total debt outstanding,” they bemoaned.

The Private Health Facilities Association said, “What is even more depressing is the evasiveness of some insurance companies by informing their clients (corporate organizations/individuals) to desist from accessing healthcare from certain facilities since they are no longer in good standing to provide the needed care.”

They lamented that, “We have at some point witnessed the Collapse of certain private health Insurance companies … which has created a huge bad debt in the books of our members. The fear that, the behaviour of some Private Health Insurance Schemes may end up folding up with millions of cedis belonging to service providers cannot be overlooked.”