The pharmacy surprise: Why you’re paying extra for prescriptions, and how to avoid itIt’s a familiar moment for many: you arrive at the pharmacy to collect your prescription, only to be told that you need to pay a ‘levy’. ![]() For many medical aid members, this moment, the unplanned co-payment, is one of the most frustrating parts of managing their health. What makes it worse is that it's often avoidable. The reason it happens, and the way around it, comes down to two things: whether your medicine appears on your benefit plan’s approved formulary, and whether you collect it from a designated network pharmacy. What a formulary actually isMedical aid schemes use a formulary, which is essentially a list of medicines that the scheme has approved for cover. Medicines on this list are selected because they are considered safe and clinically effective. It is also important to know that the formulary is not uniform across all benefit plans, the list of covered medicines can differ depending on your specific benefit option, meaning, what is covered on one plan may not be covered on another. According to your medical aid’s scheme rules, when your doctor prescribes something outside of that list, or when you collect your medication from a pharmacy that is not part of your scheme's network, you may be asked to cover part of the cost yourself. That portion is called your co-payment. The good news is that a little knowledge goes a long way. In most cases, a short conversation with your doctor or pharmacist is all it takes to avoid paying extra. How medication tiers work, and why they matterMost medical aid schemes classify medicines into tiers. Your tier determines how much your scheme covers, and how much, if anything, you pay. While structures differ between schemes, the general framework looks like this:
Understanding these tiers can help you make cost-effective treatment choices. Five ways to reduce or eliminate your co-payment
Why formularies existFormularies are not just cost-cutting tools; they help direct members towards medicines that are clinically proven and cost-effective, ensuring schemes are better able to remain sustainable and keep contributions manageable for all members over the long term. The intent is not to limit access to good treatment; it is to ensure that good treatment remains accessible to everyone. Making your prescription work harder for youPrescription medicines are central to how millions of South Africans manage both short-term illness and long-term health conditions. Getting the most out of your medical aid cover means understanding the system well enough to work within it. Medshield Medical Scheme maintains a formulary built around medicines that are clinically appropriate, safe, and cost-effective. Members can search the approved formulary list at https://www.mediscor.co.za/search-client-medicine-Formulary/, access the Scheme’s designated pharmacy networks on Medshield’s website, and speak to their healthcare provider about options that are aligned to the formulary when a prescription is issued. The co-payment at the pharmacy counter is not always inevitable. In many cases, it is simply the cost of not knowing and that is easy enough to change.
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