Discovery Health Medical Scheme has reversed its decision to recover R125 million from 16,507 members due to a systems error, following public outcry and regulatory scrutiny. The error, stemming from a 2025 update, led to incorrect billing notices up to R80,000 per member. The scheme's administrator will absorb the costs, with no impact on 2026 benefits.
A systems error at Discovery Health Medical Scheme affected 16,507 members across executive, comprehensive, and priority plans with Above Threshold Benefits (ATB). The glitch, triggered by an early 2025 update, mishandled claims for over-the-counter, non-preferentially priced, and ethical medicines, causing members to reach their ATB thresholds prematurely. This resulted in the scheme overpaying for services that members should have covered themselves, leading to recovery demands issued just before Christmas.
Discovery Health initially notified members of the error, seeking repayments totaling around R125 million—equivalent to 0.1% of the scheme's annual claims of R3.6 billion for these members. Some demands reached R80,000, sparking widespread distress. MediCheck, an advocacy group, estimated the disputed amount at R130 million to R170 million and escalated the issue to the Council for Medical Schemes (CMS).
Public backlash intensified after a contentious radio interview with Discovery Health CEO Dr Ron Whelan on Cape Talk, where he defended the recoveries. However, on January 12, 2026, Discovery announced it would absorb the full cost, refund any payments already made, and ensure no 2026 benefit disruptions. "We apologise unreservedly to members affected by this error," Whelan stated. "Covering this cost is the right decision, one that reflects our commitment to fairness, integrity and putting members first."
MediCheck CEO Mark Hyman welcomed the reversal: "This outcome ensures no member is financially prejudiced by Discovery’s systems failure." Affected member Lynette expressed relief: "I am very relieved that Discovery have decided to take responsibility for their error and found the moral courage to do the right thing."
The CMS plans to investigate the error to strengthen governance and prevent recurrences, noting the administrator's responsibility under the Medical Schemes Act. As a for-profit entity, Discovery Health (the administrator) reported R4.3 billion in profits for the year ending June 2025, separate from the non-profit scheme. The incident highlights vulnerabilities in medical scheme administration, affecting 10.5% of eligible plans but less than 0.6% of total membership.