Bahrain: Parliament Calls for Regulation of Private Hospitals
The Daily Tribune, 13 November 2024: The Parliament has called on Bahrain’s health regulator to address high fees at private hospitals accusing some of creating a “false image” of quality by inflating costs – a step towards fairer healthcare for all.
The proposal has urged the National Health Regulatory Authority (NHRA) to step in and monitor private healthcare fees.
Parliamentarians have pointed out that many citizens turn to private care due to long waits at public hospitals, only to face the added strain of high costs.
The CEO of Taj Medical Group has added perspective from the private sector, noting that recent regulatory price cuts have intensified competition but could also impact standards of care.
Certain hospitals have slashed fees to unsustainable levels in an effort to dominate the market, which can compromise quality.
There is no oversight on what private hospitals charge, inflated fees risk turning fair healthcare into a luxury rather than a basic right.
He has also emphasised that any monitoring should be grounded in carefully reviewed standards to ensure effective oversight, adding that robust criteria would be essential to maintain service quality without stifling the sector.
The proposal, now approved, calls on NHRA to make certain that healthcare remains fair and accessible to all, without placing undue financial burdens on citizens.
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