Huge salaries for medical aid trustees: Report

08 September 2014 - 09:10
By Sapa

A large chunk of medical aid contributions is spent on non-healthcare costs, including substantial payments to trustees, the Business Times reported on Sunday.

The Council for Medical Schemes, which polices the 87 medical schemes registered in South Africa, said the public should scrutinise the salaries of principal officers and trustees, who are meant to ensure members get treated fairly.

In a report, the council found the top-earning principal officer was Anton Rijnen, the former head of Medihelp, who received R6 million last year, up 80 percent from the year before.

Bestmed's Dries la Grange was paid R5.6m, and Discovery Health's Milton Streak got R5.4m last year, a 34 percent salary hike in a year.

Fourteen trustees of the Government Employees Medical Scheme were paid an average of R568,000 each. The 10 trustees of Bonitas made an average of R373,000. The trustees do part time work to ensure the scheme is run properly.

In all, 8.8m South Africans paid R129.8 billion in medical aid contributions last year, 10.4 percent more than the previous year.

Medical aids paid R112.9bn last year, 8.9 percent more than the previous year. A large portion of this did not go to hospitals or doctors, but to brokers and administrators and to cover non-healthcare costs.

The amount paid to hospitals last year dropped 0.8 percent to R39.4bn.