PhilHealth adjusts employees' premium

THE Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth) has started implementing its premium adjustment for formal economy members this year.

The adjustment will be applied to employees’ PhilHealth premiums for the month of January, which employers will remit and report to PhilHealth this month.

Although the law allows the corporation to collect up to 5 percent of an employee’s basic monthly salary for insurance premiums, it previously charged only 2.5 percent.

This year, that rate has been adjusted to 2.75 percent, which is only a .25 percent difference, along with the new monthly salary base of P10,000 and salary cap of P40,000.

To compute the monthly PhilHealth premium, simply multiply the basic monthly salary by .0275 (or 2.75 percent).

The new minimum monthly premium rate of employees earning below the salary base of P10,000 is P275 or 2.75% of P10,000; while for those earning above the salary cap of P40,000, the new maximum premium rate is P1,100 or 2.75% of P40,000. However, only 50% of the computed monthly premium rate will be deducted from the employee’s pay. The other 50 percent will be paid for by the employer.

In a forum with company managers and representatives of small, medium and large enterprises from Eastern, Central and Western Visayas, PhilHealth 7 vice president William O. Chavez said that the agency has been rolling out several new benefit packages and expanding its coverage without corresponding premium increase.

Chavez cited PhilHealth’s Z benefit packages for catastrophic medical cases, such as the P600,000 coverage for low risk kidney transplantation and the P550,000 coverage for coronary artery bypass graft surgery.

PhilHealth has been putting measures in place to ensure sustainability of the PhilHealth fund for its members.

Aside from the slight adjustment in the premium rate of employed members, PhilHealth discouraged missing premium payments among informal economy members (individually-paying, voluntary, etc.), and encouraged non-members to enroll and start paying premium (especially children of members who no longer qualify as dependents) in order to start being entitled to PhilHealth benefits sooner.

Members must have already paid at least nine months of premium within the last 12 months prior to hospitalization to be entitled to coverage.

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