No public healthcare for expats in Kuwait
Kuwait is considering plans to stop all access to public health services for expatriates – though they pay KD 50 per year for health insurance. The idea is to reduce stress on the government budget, weakened by lower oil international prices.
Suggestions in this regard include doing away with ‘harmful subsidies’ which include healthcare for expats in public medical facilities, according to a report by the Supreme Council for Planning and Development.
The report calls for imitating an example followed in the 1990’s when the Kuwaiti government scrapped free education for expatriates in Kuwait, thus banning foreigners from studying at public and forcing them to enroll in private schools. The action led to a boom in the private sector and skyrocketing of private school tuition fees.
The scrapping of access to public health services would leave foreigners no option but to pay for private health insurance. Though it is unclear how the government will handle the KD 50 annual health insurance fee it currently charges each of the country’s 3 million expatriates.
Source : KuwaitTimes
Kuwait News
- Events in Kuwait
- Rehlat Eyes Jump in Web Traffic, Bets Big on Business and Leisure Travel
- Egyptian Housewife caught
- Mother loses children’s custody for smoking shisha
- From January 2017, the minor age lowered to 16 in Kuwait
- Renewal of residence for dependent visa
- Facebook friendship ended on Rape
- Swine Flu diagnosed in Kuwait
- Cleaning workers refused to work
- Concert of Hope 2016
- Annual Holiday Bazaar
- Stop employing expatriates
- Ban on expats entry into the airport
- Arrested a nurse for injecting patients with a kind of drug which makes it impossible
- Salary requirement – Visit visa
- Filipino raped for stealing the Expensive Watch
- DAI’s Fall Festival
- 3D ARTWORK Festival at Boulevard
- The concert of Elmira Kalimullina – “The silver voice of Russia”
- Late Night Road Show
- 2017 Welcome Shoot
Filed in: All • Expats in Kuwait • Local News