The price of individual health plans rose 382% in 18 years in Brazil. According to a survey by the Institute of Applied Economic Research (Ipea), between 2000 and 2018, the price of individual health insurance in Brazil grew more than double the rate of health sector inflation in the period, which was 180%. The Ipea evaluates that the National Health Agency (ANS) completely failed in the attempt to regulate the service. Ipea also proposes a new calculation methodology that considers the National Broad Consumer Price Index (IPCA) as a reference for the adjustment.
In an official statement, the National Agency for Supplementary Health (ANS) said that "it considers technically inadequate the comparisons made [by IPEA] between the index of readjustment of individual health plans and consumer price indexes, whether general, such as the IPCA, or specific".
Currently, according to ValorInveste website, Brazil has about 47 million beneficiaries of private health insurance. Over the past three years, more than three million people have stopped having health care plans because of rising unemployment and falling incomes.
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