Sunday, February 11, 2007

Health in the news: If approved, people won't pay for expensive medicines

The medical care deputy of the Social Security Organization (SSO), Mr. Ali Fattahi, said that if the Supreme Insurance Concil (Shoraye Ali Bimeh) approves a suggested official plan to financially protect the cost of treatment for patients undergoing hemodialysis, hemophiliacs, and thalassemia patients (so called privileged medical conditions or Bimari-haye Khas in Farsi), these patients will not have to pay for expensive medicines. The SSO now pays the total cost of medicines for 8,153 of such payments he added. The plan says that patients should pay a co-payment for cheaper drugs while the insurers pay 100% of costs of expensive medicines. The SSO covers 85% of costs of medicines for patients with cancers although cancers have not been listed as so called privileged medical conditions , Mr. Fattahi said. 3,562 patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) are being financially protected by the SSO he said but he did not specify the percentage of medical cost coverage by the SSO for these patients.
Source: www.jamejamonline.ir , Feb, 7 2007
Code: 23N

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