Friday, December 18, 2015
By DENISE MAYCOCK
Tribune Freeport Reporter
dmaycock@tribunemedia.net
PRIME Minister Perry Christie has indicated that his government is going ahead with the implementation of registration and enrolment for National Health Insurance in January and plans to move to the next phase by March.
Speaking in Grand Bahama on Friday, Mr Christie said that by the beginning of a new budget year in July, government will have given thought on a leap forward in 2016 with creation of a major fund, pending the introduction of benefit packages.
“When doctors ask what happens when you introduce primary care and a patient comes to them and get NHI to pay for their services, what happens if the doctor diagnose that (the patient) has some catastrophic illness? The government will cover itself pending introduction of benefit packages by creating a major fund, hopefully, that we will be able to access to cover such exigencies and intervention,” he said.
“We are not going to cause a disruption in the economy, and we are going to do it on a basis that will be manifested in the best interest, not just of the people of the country but for the economy where outside rating agencies look at the economy and look at government’s decision and say whether it is good or bad.”
The Prime Minister said he has taken “a major commitment not to place on the economy of the Bahamas a burden that the economy cannot accommodate. Even though by its very nature and outcome it is of enormous significant consequence to the lives of people of the Commonwealth of the Bahamas, we made a decision that until such time as people could see and feel what they would be paying for we were going to use central government, the Consolidated Fund, to meet the cost of implementing initiatives, and so we went to contract and we continue to go to contract to put the facilities of the Ministry of Health in the best possible position for people to appreciate the changes that are being made,” he explained.
Mr Christie said all clinics in Grand Bahama have been remediated, improved and renovated, with the exception of the West End Clinic, which is expected to undergo improvements in January. The extension of clinic hours at Eight Mile Rock Clinic, he noted, has greatly reduced pressure on medical services at the Rand Memorial Hospital.
“The research of the MOGB (Ministry of Grand Bahama) has demonstrated that extending clinic hours allow people in that part of GB to have access to medical services there (at EMR Clinic) as opposed to the Rand,” he said. It was recently reported that wait time at the Accident and Emergency at the Rand had been reduced by almost 20 per cent.
Mr Christie will be proposing the same extension of clinic hours in New Providence.
Comments
Well_mudda_take_sic says...
Without the political elites and their business cronies in both the Christie-led PLP governments and Ingraham-led FNM governments being forced to give back the wealth they have stolen from the Bahamian people, and without there being a large enough work force of Bahamians with decent paying jobs, the financial and economic conditions necessary to support a NHI system that can provide quality healthcare will never exist. That's the plain and simple truth of it all, and Christie and his Sanigest cohorts know it! Bahamian workers are already burdened beyond the breaking point by government taxes and fees of one kind or another and Bahamian small businesses are going out of business in record numbers thereby further exacerbating the country's unemployment problems as a result of the failed economic and social policies of both the Christie-led PLP governments and the Ingraham-led FNM governments over the last 2+ decades. A Minnis led-FNM government would virtually assure that a spike is put through the heart of our country to kill it and leave it as a failed state, to be ridiculed and shunned for all time to come.....much like Haiti.
Posted 19 December 2015, 11:37 a.m. Suggest removal
kairosmatt says...
This is obviously a bad idea and will be screwed up and end up in the wrong pockets. Moving on:
Watching Perry try piece together words and form sentences is bloody joke!
"When doctors ask what happens when you introduce primary care and a patient comes to them and get NHI to pay for their services, what happens if the doctor diagnose that (the patient) has some catastrophic illness? The government will cover itself pending introduction of benefit packages by creating a major fund, hopefully, that we will be able to access to cover such exigencies and intervention,”
Sorry, that is not a complete thought, much less sentence or two. By any standards. But it does show progress, as he did use words and phrases somewhat related to the topic in general, which he usually doesn't even bother to do. So we've got that going for us!
Agree with him or not, its just plain embarrassing that he represent this country and is completely incapable of getting up in front of people (nationally or internationally) and give a competent speech.
Posted 20 December 2015, 11:29 p.m. Suggest removal
TruePeople says...
Lol, i is catch him talking fool nuff time, from sentence start to sentence end, he is forget what lie he's lying and it is come out all nonsense lol
Posted 21 December 2015, 2:18 p.m. Suggest removal
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