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Perspectives of Nigerian doctors on the practice of rebates, fee-splitting, and kickbacks
Bukunmi, Michael Idowu; Mayowa, Abimbola Soneye; Tolulope, Adebayo Okedere; Olaoluwa Onigbinde, Stephen; Ishola, Aderemi.
  • Bukunmi, Michael Idowu; s.af
  • Mayowa, Abimbola Soneye; s.af
  • Tolulope, Adebayo Okedere; s.af
  • Olaoluwa Onigbinde, Stephen; s.af
  • Ishola, Aderemi; s.af
West Afr. j. radiol ; 27(2): 128-135, 2020. tab
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1273562
ABSTRACT

Background:

Fee splitting is a global pandemic in the health-care industry, whereby financial and nonfinancial inducements are offered to health-care practitioners in exchange for guaranteed patient referral, continuous patronage, or preferential usage/prescription of the payer's products.

Methods:

We surveyed 280 medical doctors from August 2017 to October 2017 to assess their knowledge, perception, and attitude toward fee-splitting using self-administered questionnaires.

Results:

The majority (89%) of our respondents indicated that they were aware of the existence of fee-splitting in the Nigerian health-care industry. About 34% accept rebates, while 70% admitted to knowing other colleagues who accept rebates. The amount received as rebates was ≤20% of the cost of an investigation. More than half of the respondents (52%) opined that the practice is a nationwide phenomenon. An astonishing 78% of respondents either did not know (61%) or asserted wrongly (17%) that the practice is not a violation Nigerian Medical Council rules. Only 46% affirmed that the practice is unethical. Compared to private hospitals, fee-splitting is less in public hospitals. Sixty-one percent noted that other health-care workers (besides physicians) are also involved. The primary allures of fee-splitting were a quest for an extra source of income (64%), poor/irregular salaries (60%), ignorance of its illegality (56%), and greed (47%). The identified deleterious consequences were unnecessary investigations/procedures, inflated health-care cost, quackery, delayed treatment/prolonged hospital stay, beclouded clinical judgment, and negative public perception.

Conclusion:

Stricter regulatory enforcement and continuous ethics education are needed to disrupt the widespread fee-splitting culture
Subject(s)
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Index: AIM (Africa) Main subject: Lakes / Ethics, Medical / Fees and Charges / Nigeria Type of study: Health economic evaluation Country/Region as subject: Africa Language: English Journal: West Afr. j. radiol Year: 2020 Type: Article

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Index: AIM (Africa) Main subject: Lakes / Ethics, Medical / Fees and Charges / Nigeria Type of study: Health economic evaluation Country/Region as subject: Africa Language: English Journal: West Afr. j. radiol Year: 2020 Type: Article