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Health Department dismisses NHI collapse claims after ConCourt ruling

todayMay 18, 2026 27

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The National Department of Health says the Constitutional Court’s ruling on sections of the National Health Act does not invalidate the National Health Insurance Act, despite claims from opposition parties and lobby groups that the judgement represents a setback for the policy. 

On Monday, the apex court declared sections 36 to 40 of the National Health Act unconstitutional, upholding an earlier ruling by the Pretoria High Court.

The court found that the provisions unjustifiably limited the right of healthcare professionals to choose a trade, occupation or profession.

The contested sections relate to the proposed Certificate of Need system, which would have allowed the government to determine where healthcare practitioners may work and what services they may provide.

In response, the Health Department stressed that the provisions in question were enacted more than two decades ago and have never been implemented.

Health Department spokesperson Foster Mohale said the ruling has no direct bearing on the NHI Act.

“While noting this judgement, it is important to clarify that the judgement is not relating to the National Health Insurance Act. The sections in question were passed by Parliament 23 years ago and have never been brought into effect. Therefore, there is no direct impact on the NHI Act, as some would think in the political circles and public sector have rushed to mislead the public on.”

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    Health Department dismisses NHI collapse claims after ConCourt ruling Realeboga Nke

Trade union Solidarity, which brought the case alongside several healthcare bodies, welcomed the ruling, describing it as a major victory against state control in healthcare.

Solidarity Deputy Chief Executive, Anton van der Bijl, said the Certificate of Need framework was central to the NHI proposal.

“The government wanted to move health practitioners around like pawns on a chessboard to cover up its own failures. Today the court said South Africans are not state property and professionals are not pawns of the government.”

The Freedom Front Plus also welcomed the judgment, calling it a “major blow” to the NHI and arguing that government should focus on improving existing healthcare facilities rather than centralising control.

ActionSA described the ruling as a “landmark victory” against state overreach, saying the country’s healthcare crisis is rooted in corruption, failing infrastructure and poor governance.

Meanwhile, several legal challenges against the NHI remain before the courts, including cases challenging it’s constitutionality and the public participation process followed before it was signed into law.

Government maintains that preparations for the rollout of the NHI will continue, pending the outcome of ongoing litigation, as part of its goal of achieving universal healthcare coverage.

Written by: Realeboga Nke

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