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Old 29-06-2014, 02:10 PM
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Thumbs up KTPH sends debt collector to go after patients

An honorable member of the Coffee Shop Has Just Posted the Following:

KTPH sends debt collector to go after patients

June 29th, 2014 | Author: Editorial




A reader has forwarded his friend’s letter to TRE, just to show how heartless
our “privatized” hospitals have become.

Alexandra Health Pte Ltd, which operates Khoo Teck Puat Hospital, has engaged
debt collector Accolade Advisory Asia Pte Ltd to collect an outstanding balance
of $621.20 from the reader’s friend.

According to its website [Link], Accolade Advisory Asia
provides “total receivables management solutions to the risk manager”.

It said, “Companies and financial institutions have turned to us for debt
management, debt recovery as well as the specialised/customised research
capabilities required for effective receivables management.”

It also said that it has established “reliable and experienced associates
around the world” to help recover overseas debts. Hence, if someone was to skip
town, the company can engage their overseas associates to trace and find
him.

The letter ended by saying:


“If we do not receive your payment within (7) days from the date of this
letter, action will be taken to recover the debt without further reference to
you.”


Privatization of our public hospitals

To help make our hospitals more “efficient”, the government has embarked on a
“privatization” programme. The government set up a private company called, “MOH
Holdings Pte Ltd” (MOHH) to oversee all the public health institutions in
Singapore. MOHH is legally owned by [Link]:

  • Chua Geok Wah – 1 share
  • Minister for Finance – 672,866,308 shares

(Chua Geok Wah is the Accountant-General of Singapore)

According to its website information [Link], MOHH is the holding
company of Singapore’s public healthcare assets. MOHH currently undertakes
strategic initiatives for the Ministry of Health and the public healthcare
institutions. These include:

  • Common employment of junior doctors to ensure effective allocation and
    training of our medical manpower;
  • Developing a national IT framework for Singapore’s public healthcare sector;
  • Providing a system for joint recruitment of healthcare professionals for
    Singapore’s public healthcare institutions;
  • Developing and operationalising a talent management and HR framework for the
    entire public healthcare spectrum;
  • Optimising selected finance-related functions within the MOHH Group, such as
    central treasury;
  • Providing corporate advisory and support to MOHH’s subsidiaries, and
    creating a corporate development system to support future organisational
    developments in the MOHH Group; and,
  • Providing strategic and operational Board secretarial support for MOHH’s
    Group of entities.

Our public hospitals within MOHH are divided into six broad clusters. They
include:

  1. National University Health System (NUHS)
  2. National Healthcare Group (NHG)
  3. Singapore Health Services (SHS)
  4. Alexandra Health System (AHPL)
  5. Jurong Health Services (JHS)
  6. Eastern Health Alliance (EHA)

Liak Teng Lit is the CEO of Alexandra Health


Liak Teng Lit


Alexandra Health was established on 1 April 2008, as a healthcare cluster in
the north that currently manages the Khoo Teck Puat Hospital. As part of an
integrated healthcare system to serve the community in the region, Alexandra
Health will build and oversee the Yishun Community Hospital, Admiralty Medical
Centre and an Integrated Healthcare Development @ Woodlands. This integrated
healthcare network will be operational from end December 2015 to 2022.

The Group Chief Executive Officer of Alexandra Health System is Mr Liak Teng
Lit. He is also the Deputy Chairman of NEA. Last month, he scolded Singaporeans
for their “poor upbringing” in response to some patrons who did not want to
return trays at hawker centres (‘NEA Dty Chairman scolds S’poreans for poor upbringing‘),

Mr Liak then said, “If you all eat properly and not eat until a mess, how
will you dirty your hands (for returning trays)? It’s problem of
upbringing
. Everyone should depend on oneself (to return trays). Don’t
depend on others. Everyone should really reflect on this.”

Last year, in an interview with the Straits Times (ST) [Link],
he also said of Singaporeans, “In hawker centres we eat like
pigs
, with food and tissue all over the tables. It’s a
disgrace
. We don’t eat like that at home.”

Mr Liak also frowns on subsidising healthcare. In an interview with ST on 20
July 2012 (‘Why the dung beetle is his hero ‘), it was reported:


He (Liak) frowns upon how subsidies have inflated the demand for health care
and led to shortages: ‘The truth is when we go for a buffet, almost all of us
eat a little bit more than we normally do. If you subsidise something, at the
margin, there will always be more demand.’

Subsidised wards are so cheap, some children may prefer their elderly parents
to stay a day or two longer. But if every patient delays discharge by just half
a day, Singapore will need to build another Singapore General Hospital that
costs $2 billion, and about half a billion a year in subsidies, to run. The
demand for subsidies is a ‘bottomless pit’, he warns. ‘If you’re going to
subsidise my petrol, I won’t drive the Toyota Prius, I will drive the Lexus
460.

‘Follow the British National Health Service? That may mean that the
Government has to increase the goods and services tax to, say, 20 per cent to
cover the cost of these additional beds,’ he says, adding that Singapore’s 3M
framework – Medisave, MediShield and Medifund – is sound.

As diseases are increasingly diagnosed at the molecular level with more
expensive drugs, costs will shoot through the roof. His fear for Singaporeans
today is that they clamour for their rights but disown their responsibilities.
In cyberspace, there are howling monkeys who scream, shout and
demoralise others.


‘My worry is that everybody is screaming about his rights as a citizen to get
subsidies, but he doesn’t feel he has a responsibility to contribute or pay his
taxes. They have the right to treatment but don’t have a responsibility to take
care of their health,’ he says.
In that interview, he also told the ST reporter that his hero is the dung
beetle:


He (Liak) says straight-faced that his hero is the dung beetle, which feeds
on faeces. ‘They walk the ground, burrow underground, clean up the environment,
recycle nutrients and improve soil aeration. Most of all, they solve problems
others leave behind.’
The reader who wrote to TRE said, “I am very disappointed that KTPH SEND such
a letter to my friend to chase for the outstanding payments.”

It’s not known how and why our public health system has transformed itself
into such commercialized one, even engaging debt collectors with international
linkages and issuing letters of demand to its citizen patients.

During the National Day Rally last year, PM Lee promised:


“Besides housing, we will also give Singaporeans more assurance over life’s
uncertainties, especially healthcare. Working adults feel the pressure taking
care of growing children, also looking after elderly parents. People with
chronic illnesses worry, worry about the cost of consultations, the cost of
medicines, maybe a few cents a day but day after day, year after year. When you
have high blood pressure, the doctor prescribes something to you. He says,
please take this, please take this for the rest of your life and you have to
take it seriously. Older people worry about the medical bills which they may
face and worry about the burden which they may place on their children.
So we will improve healthcare financing to give Singaporeans more peace
of mind
.”
Later, the MediShield Life Review Committee (MLRC) was formed to review
Singapore’s healthcare financing and on Friday (27 Jun), the Government
announced that it has accepted all the recommendations by the Committee with
regard to the new MediShield Life scheme (‘Medishield Life: ‘Premiums will need to increase’‘).

MediShield Life will roll out in end-2015 next year. It remains to be seen if
after the implementation of MediShield Life, Singaporeans will still be chased
by debt collectors sent-in by our public hospitals, since PM Lee promised that
the new improved healthcare financing will give Singaporeans “more peace of
mind”.

What do you think?


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