“One year after Singapore introduced MediShield Life – a universal insurance scheme, more people are getting help with their medical bills. Nearly 400,000 claims were made between last November and September this year. A total of $614.3 million was paid out.
Of this, $102.5 million went to people who were previously uninsured, a Ministry of Health (MOH) spokesman told The Straits Times. Over the same period in the previous year, $307.5 million was disbursed for 291,500 claims.
There is a trade-off. Premiums rose, mounting to $1,736 million in the 11 months from its launch – compared with $685.7 million in the same period the previous year. Almost half was paid by the Government, largely as premium subsidies.”
44.8% claims to premiums ratio in the previous year?
So, does it mean that the claims to premiums ratio over the same period in the previous year was 44.8 per cent ($307.5 million claims divided by $685.7 million premiums)?
And the claims to premiums ratio in the 11 months from its launch was 70.8 per cent ($614.3 million claims divided by $868 million premiums ($1,736 million x 0.5 as half “was paid by the Government, largely as premium subsidies”))?
“Premiums not disbursed will be invested in the Special Singapore Government Securities as this has stable, long-term stability, said Fang Ai Lian, who chairs the MediShield Life Council.”