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Three Medical Schemes Fail to Meet Solvency Requirements

26 May 2025


Three medical schemes, Medihelp, Sizwe Hosmed Medical Scheme, and Transmed Medical Fund, did not maintain their solvency ratios at or above the statutory minimum of 25% in 2023, according to the latest Council for Medical Schemes (CMS) Financial Performance Industry Report 2023. – Moneyweb (16 May 2025)
Transmed Medical Fund improved its solvency ratio to 23.79% in 2023 from 17.7% in 2022. However, this marks at least the fourth consecutive year it has failed to meet the 25% threshold, having recorded ratios of 19.72% in 2021 and 22.37% in 2020.
Sizwe Hosmed Medical Scheme’ solvency ratio is down to 15.73% in 2023 from a compliant 25.59% in 2022.
Medihelp’s ratio declined to 23.84% in 2023 from a healthy 33.93% the previous year.
The report noted that the overall industry solvency, while declining from 47.14% in 2022 to 43.45% in 2023, "exceeds pre-Covid-19 pandemic levels" (34.54% in 2018 and 35.61% in 2019) and remains "significantly higher than the minimum required level of 25%”.
According to Dr Musa Gumede, CMS Chief Executive and Registrar a significant factor straining medical schemes is the escalating cost of healthcare. Healthcare claims per average beneficiary per month surged by 8.7% in 2023, from R1,840.48 in 2022 to R2,000.57, continuing a pre-pandemic trend of above-inflation increases.

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