UAE healthcare: How clinics can survive the crowded market
How can small clinics overcome the increasing pressures caused by oversupply in the UAE’s healthcare market?
Dubai alone has seen capacity massively outstrip demand, leaving many small independents struggling with low occupancy. But providing mutual support under ‘stronger together’ partnerships can help you achieve profits via economies of scale and cost-sharing.
Here, we look at the main issues facing small providers and how you can avoid the perfect storm on the horizon by forming alliances.
1. Too many clinics
Hospitals and clinics in the UAE far outweigh demand. With over 3,295 licensed clinical facilities in Dubai, up from 2,000 in 2016, and with many more under construction, we are literally building a problem for ourselves.
Clinics need at least 50% occupancy to cover costs in order to create any sensible return. However, Dubai simply doesn’t have the patient numbers to justify such rapid growth, with many currently running at 35–50% occupancy.
Clinics need at least 50% occupancy to cover costs in order to create any sensible return.
With King’s College Hospital and Mediclinic’s Parkview among the latest high-end facilities to join the market – and plans for more in the pipeline – the disparity between capacity and demand looks set to grow further.
What it means for you
This will drastically affect the number of patients who walk through your doors. Even with solid marketing and sales efforts, it will be a constant struggle to attract new patients while the choice of facilities is improving. With patients in control, they will be able to select their clinic of choice at the most affordable price.
2. Population and clinic mismatch
Although running at almost 7% over the past 12 months, the population growth rate still isn’t high enough to balance the supply-demand challenge.
What we are also seeing is the replacement of well-paid, Western-trained professionals with counterparts from India and the Middle East on significantly lower remuneration packages.
These lower incomes represent a reduction in demand at the premium end of healthcare, and often a less generous insurance package that doesn’t allow for expensive hospitals and clinics.
What it means for you
Let’s look at Dubai’s private sector in isolation: most new entries are competing in the mid-to high-end sectors against an estimated annual 1.4 million private beds by 2021, as well as public sector hospitals. This puts almost unbearable pressure on smaller hospitals, as they fight for a share of a market demand for just 600,000/800,000 beds across all providers.
In a proportionately smaller pool of employees with lower remuneration, the cost of attracting each new patient is rising. In short, there will be more competition for fewer customers at the expensive, premium end.
In a proportionately smaller pool of employees with lower remuneration, the cost of attracting each new patient is rising.
3. Delayed insurance payments or rejected claims
Mandatory health insurance for employers in both Abu Dhabi and Dubai has softened the impact, but it’s not high enough in premium terms to cover the costs of claims. Averaging around AED 500 - 600 per person, per annum for entry-level cover, this is simply not adequate. It cannot pay for administration costs, brokerage fees and claims for primary, secondary and emergency care, as well as medication and diagnostics.
In Dubai, recent legislation requires emergency cover at public and private hospitals to be settled within seven days. As emergency cover accounts for a large block of business, this adds pressure on insurers who are now unable to stagger payments.
We’ve recently seen at least one employer of over 20,000 staff with unsustainable combined claim ratios exceeding 200% over a 12-month period.
What this means for you
Most insurers are now struggling, leading to claims being rejected and non-emergency payments delayed by over six months, along with a refusal to increase rates for providers.
Certain insurers are yet to settle claims from July 2018 and there are rumours of some trying to negotiate settlements to clear the backlog at half the billed price. Until insurance rates – and premiums – are increased to sustainable levels, the situation is likely to get much worse.
4. Strategic direction is missing
The sector continues to develop with what appears to be blind optimism from investors and a lack of clear guidance from regulators. The Dubai Healthcare City project, which initially aimed to recruit American Board-certified clinicians and nurses, recently dropped this clinical benchmark to become an open geographical free zone. Big question marks remain over its future direction, once the focal point of medical tourism in Dubai.
One of the reasons investment is continuing apace is that there is still a belief, in a region that seems to take comfort from bricks-and-mortar investments, that the headlines of a growing, ageing population with chronic disease make such investment a wise choice.
What it means for you
Despite efforts such as the Dubai Clinical Services Capacity Plan 2015 –2025 to ensure that regulators had clear guidance in licensing facilities according to actual needs, there’s far too much duplication of primary and secondary facilities. Instead, clinic operators need to focus on niche health services. We should also ask for a freeze on new build hospitals or clinics unless there are new areas lacking facilities. We need to give the region time for the population to catch up with the supply.
We should ask for a freeze on new build hospitals or clinics unless there are new areas lacking facilities.
5. Lack of consolidation
Any market with such massive oversupply desperately needs consolidation. Too many clinics, insurers and brokers, compounded by too few patients, create the conditions for a perfect storm.
Many small clinics are merging with larger facilities while others are admitting defeat and closing.
What it means for you
For many, the only way to stay afloat will be to join a network of smaller clinics. This strategic move could herald improved efficiency and greater success in the future.
Networks can offer small clinics and hospitals the benefits of greater efficiencies in purchasing, recruitment and retention, and sales and marketing. In turn, insurers will be attracted to alliances with networks of high-quality providers that can offer good-value services to suit their members’ budgets.
Trying to go it alone in such an over-supplied market will continue to be an uphill battle in the absence of any significant changes in the market. The reality is that small independents are stronger together.
The Healthcare Network (THN) brings together healthcare providers and insurers in a partnership based on the fundamentals of ethical performance, values and the quality of care delivery. For more information, visit www.thn.ae.
HEAD OF PEDIATRIC DEPARTMENT ?? AL - NASER CHILDREN HOSPITAL
5 年very nice topic anf very fruitful
Generated US$ 1.5+ B in Sales | Building High-Performance Sales Organizations | Samsung | P&G | Heineken | VFS Global
5 年Most informative and thought provoking article. One aspect that could be mulled over is the information collection mechanisms by the government. Are these mechanisms robust enough to collect valid information, and are the government authorities able to make reasonable conclusions to avoid such scenarios of over supply as highlighted by Mark Adams?
Medical Doctor. Pulmonary,Allergy,health Innovation
5 年Great work
Vice President, Head of Laboratory Services at Corporate NMC Healthcare
5 年Excellent write up. Regulators should place a firm lid on new clinics/hospitals until demand fairly leverages supply.