Who is eligible for free medical treatment in Oman?
Published: 06:06 AM,Jun 12,2023 | EDITED : 10:06 AM,Jun 12,2023
Muscat: Dr. Helal al-Sabti, Minister of Health, issued a decision (126/2023) regulating fees for medical treatment, affirming the commitment of health institutions to provide treatment services to all citizens and residents of the Sultanate of Oman .
All health institutions must take all necessary measures to ensure that the prescribed fees are collected in a manner that does not preclude the treatment of emergency cases.
The new decision specified categories that enjoy free treatment services in the Sultanate:
Omanis, and Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) citizens residing in the Sultanate of Oman for a period of no less than three months. The earlier decision did not specify the period of residence for GCC and foreigners married to Omani women, and this includes: husbands, children, those
born to an Omani wife from this marriage, foreign women married to Omanis, foreigners working in the government and their families according to their service contracts, foreign members of the diplomatic corps, and their family members.
New categories: Foreign parents of an Omani residing with him in the Sultanate of Oman, and foreign parents and children of a foreign husband or wife of Omani origin residing with him in the Sultanate of Oman.
The decision excluded the category of visiting delegations to the Sultanate, including delegations of sports and cultural clubs invited by the official authorities, from free treatment services, but added them to a category in which free treatment will be provided with primary health care services, emergency and ambulance services, and treatment of critical cases that need to admission to health institutions.
New categories of patients have been exempted from paying fees, such as patients with an epidemic or infectious disease that threatens public health and for which a decision is issued by the minister, their contacts and suspected cases, organ donors for one of the categories specified in the decision, children benefiting from the expanded immunization program, all beneficiaries of national vaccination campaigns, and circumcision operations for converts to the Islamic religion. in the Sultanate of Oman.
The regulation said that the fees for those who are eligible for free treatment have not changed with regard to registration, annual renewal, and admission to tertiary, secondary, and primary healthcare hospitals for categories (VIPs, private nursing wards, and a private room in the general ward). As for the groups who are not eligible for free treatment, these fees have been raised.
The decision also set detailed fees according to the services provided.
The decision also includes fees for additional services, for pilgrims and Umrah performers, which are RO2 for those who are eligible for free treatment. The decision also set fees for using ambulances in two cases with medical coverage and without medical coverage for those who are not eligible for free treatment.
All health institutions must take all necessary measures to ensure that the prescribed fees are collected in a manner that does not preclude the treatment of emergency cases.
The new decision specified categories that enjoy free treatment services in the Sultanate:
Omanis, and Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) citizens residing in the Sultanate of Oman for a period of no less than three months. The earlier decision did not specify the period of residence for GCC and foreigners married to Omani women, and this includes: husbands, children, those
born to an Omani wife from this marriage, foreign women married to Omanis, foreigners working in the government and their families according to their service contracts, foreign members of the diplomatic corps, and their family members.
New categories: Foreign parents of an Omani residing with him in the Sultanate of Oman, and foreign parents and children of a foreign husband or wife of Omani origin residing with him in the Sultanate of Oman.
The decision excluded the category of visiting delegations to the Sultanate, including delegations of sports and cultural clubs invited by the official authorities, from free treatment services, but added them to a category in which free treatment will be provided with primary health care services, emergency and ambulance services, and treatment of critical cases that need to admission to health institutions.
New categories of patients have been exempted from paying fees, such as patients with an epidemic or infectious disease that threatens public health and for which a decision is issued by the minister, their contacts and suspected cases, organ donors for one of the categories specified in the decision, children benefiting from the expanded immunization program, all beneficiaries of national vaccination campaigns, and circumcision operations for converts to the Islamic religion. in the Sultanate of Oman.
The regulation said that the fees for those who are eligible for free treatment have not changed with regard to registration, annual renewal, and admission to tertiary, secondary, and primary healthcare hospitals for categories (VIPs, private nursing wards, and a private room in the general ward). As for the groups who are not eligible for free treatment, these fees have been raised.
The decision also set detailed fees according to the services provided.
The decision also includes fees for additional services, for pilgrims and Umrah performers, which are RO2 for those who are eligible for free treatment. The decision also set fees for using ambulances in two cases with medical coverage and without medical coverage for those who are not eligible for free treatment.