Ong Ye Kung I am dismayed at the monthly rental bid of over $52,000 (or over $1,000 psm) for a GP clinic in Tampines

bunegg

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Dun think will affect consumers. If they charge too high no one will go. Usually they only carrot those with insurance coverage. There's this clinic at my place. When I chut health insurance card they whack all the expensive branded medicines for me. But when I chut my blue chas card. Suddenly become very cheap with all generic subsidised medication some they dun have so they order from outside and send to me. Same medication from polyclinic which is subsidised.
Long term it will shift the benchmark for pricing and the rest will all increase price. This is called spoil market. Overquoting is same as lowballing to cut competition. All these tactics will have risk that will eventually cascade to consumers
 

kokchee2001

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When I saw articles of her saying that from way back, sounded damn stupid, how can it be. But when I went to read more, she was referring specifically to HAWKER CENTRES - controlled by NEA. Not coffee shops, not malls, etc which are private. So over the years, quoted out of context.

To be fair to her, hawker centres' rental is much much lower. But still quite tone deaf. Shld have said affects less for hawker centres and not "do not directly affect food prices".

Sauce: https://lkyspp.nus.edu.sg/docs/defa...ct-food-prices-amy-khor.pdf?sfvrsn=9273720a_2
It does. hawkers center are not everywhere. And government have stop building hawkers center in 90s and 2000s, until mid of 2010s then restart.

So today many F&B are food court/shops under HDB or malls, especially in new town developed in 90s like Bukit Panjang, Bukit Batok, Pasir Ris, Woodlands, Yishun, Sembawang, Sengkang and Punggol.
 

kokchee2001

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from another angle, this clinic services might not be cheap from the start. that is why from their calculation, they are still able to profit from such rent.

from this angle, the rent is not the direct factor of the price of its services. just that with a lower rent, they have the option to adjust their price when things dosent work out but i think they probably wont. :grin:

Amy wan sui~
There are many bidders. more than 10

This cost the bidding price to go up.

The clinic owner also say they bid for 4 places but fail
 

kokchee2001

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Exactly. HdB rental + in Tampines, dunno OYK dismay for what? If Tampines polyclinic is cheaper, faster and better, you think Dr dare to bid high?
This wont happen with polyclinics.

Polyclinic take most subsidies and difficult case.

This is true in most government owned medical facilities.

Private clinics ussualy get fast money like those easier one like simple flu, fever, headache, stomachache, minor injuries. More complex case still advise to go hospital.
 

Multiversal

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Fix your bigger hospital and polyclinic capacity problem first.
Big salary solve big problem
You dint even realise how efficient Singapore's hospitals and polyclinics are. Time for you to go outside of Singapore and get yourself an education.
 

ZhuMingQiang

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Block the rental. Force it to be lower.

Just like how dr bill patient got ethical limit as per Dr Susan Lim case. There should be ethical limit on rental for clinic space.

Looks like HDB (under MND) & MOH can cooperate on this nationwide medical clinics' rental issue at HDB estates, etc.

HDB (under MND) will review all the clinics to prioritise rental fee discount for them to provide more affordable healthcare at HDB estates, etc nationwide.
Furthermore, more rental discount to those clinics with higher rental.

MOH will monitor (granting or discontinuing operational licence, etc) on all the clinics (especially those clinics with higher rental) to ensure quality of care is not being abused or compromised with providing lower healthcare cost to their customers.

In the future, HDB (under MND) & MOH will work together to ensure new bidders for clinics will not go to the highest bidder (bidding price will not be the key factor to win the bid) but to base on quality of care and medical commitment, etc of the shortlisted bidders.
 
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onionaut

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0ShhIEP.jpeg
 

ricohflex

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You mean it is not obvious that this is a scam?
How come SGreans are so dumb?

Big time property developers / property agencies are behind this.
They have deep pockets.
Easy to collude with a person to ramp up the tender for monthly rental.

The whole idea is to manipulate the rental baseline reference.

SG Govt should not be so laissez-faire about this.
Arrest the people involved.
Interrogate at CID and give stern warnings.
 
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Joe Mahmood

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Ong Ye Kung ‘dismayed’ at $52k bid to rent Tampines HDB clinic​

I-Health Medical Holdings won the tender to operate the 50 sq m ground-floor unit at Block 954C Tampines Street 96 in March.

I-Health Medical Holdings won the tender to operate the 50 sq m ground-floor unit at Block 954C Tampines Street 96 in March. ST PHOTO: ARIFFIN JAMAR

SINGAPORE - Health Minister Ong Ye Kung said he was “dismayed” at the $52,188 monthly rental bid for a general practitioner (GP) clinic in a Tampines HDB estate as it may lead to higher healthcare costs for residents.

He pointed out that going forward, bids for future HDB GP clinics will be assessed using a model that focuses less on price, and more on quality of care, he said in a Facebook post on June 4.

Mr Ong said the high rental bid would “translate to higher cost of healthcare one way or another” and negate the Health Ministry’s efforts to keep the cost of primary healthcare affordable.

“More importantly, higher rental bids do not necessarily translate to the best healthcare that the community needs,” he added.

I-Health Medical Holdings had won the tender to operate the 50 sq m ground-floor unit at Block 954C Tampines Street 96 in March.

But the issue recently came to public attention after a doctor called the $52,188 monthly rent “obscene” in a LinkedIn post. It sparked discussion over rising rentals and healthcare costs.

Mr Andrew Chim, 37, the co-owner of I-Health Medical Holdings, had said told The Straits Times that his bid was based on the attractive attributes of the area.

He said the unit is in the middle of five Build-To-Order projects with 5,000 households, and near upcoming developments like a new mixed-use project and a shopping mall.

On June 4, Mr Ong pointed to the new tender approach for GP clinics that MOH and HDB had first launched at the Bartley Beacon development in May.

Under this new “price-quality evaluation model”, quality of care will account for 70 per cent of tender evaluation and rental price the remaining 30 per cent.



The Bartley Beacon tender closed on May 29, and Mr Ong said MOH received proposals with rental bids significantly below that for the Tampines site.

He noted that the Tampines clinic launched for tender in December 2024 and was awarded in March 2025, before tenders took on the price-quality evaluation model.

The new model which will be the norm moving forward and shift the focus away from rental rates.

“It will be a meaningful shift, both in improving primary care, and ensuring greater affordability,” Mr Ong said.

General practitioners who run clinics in HDB estates either rent directly from the state, or from landlords who own HDB commercial units.

GPs that the The Straits Times spoke to felt the $52,188 rental was too high to be sustainable. Some doctors that rented from private landlords described a volatile rental market that has seen prices rising after the pandemic.

Dr Conrad Chin, who runs the E. L. Chin Family Clinic and Surgery in Clementi, said he thought the rental amount was outrageous.

“Most older doctors do not pay above $2,000 for rent. I doubt that the ($52,188) price is sustainable in the long term,” he added.

Dr Wong Choo Wai, who runs two HDB clinics in Bedok and Jurong, said if rent is not sustainable the clinic will have to pass on the cost to patients.

Dr Wong, who rented before buying his own units in 2009 and 2015, said the rental market has been volatile.

“When the clinic starts doing well, private landlords may jack up the rent,” he said.

In 2009, the landlord for his Bedok unit asked for a 40 per cent increase in rent. As the rent “did not make sense” for the clinic, Dr Wong bought a neighbouring unit for about $750,000.

“I’m thankful I made the decision to buy, else I will be at the mercy of the landlord,” he added.

A doctor who runs a clinic in Clementi, and declined to be named, said he hopes the $52,188 rent will not trigger rent hikes as small businesses are already struggling with rentals.

“Anything over $10,000 would be difficult for me to run the clinic. As solo GPs, we don’t make that kind of money to justify the rental,” he said.

Parkway Shenton chief executive Tay Wee Kai said that rents at their clinics in HDB estates have increased across the board post Covid-19.

“This is partly due to inflation and also due to some landlords adopting a “catch-up” mentality and expecting higher rent,” he said.

Mr Tay added that during the Covid-19 pandemic, rents remained stagnant and even went down at some locations. Their branches in HDB estates comprise about half of their more than 30 clinics.

  • Isabelle Liew is a journalist at The Straits Times. She covers housing issues in Singapore, with a focus on public housing.

Related topic...

https://forums.hardwarezone.com.sg/...b-clinic-says-owners-are-not-newbies.7133926/
 

cyke69sg

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Looks like HDB (under MND) & MOH can cooperate on this nationwide medical clinics' rental issue at HDB estates, etc.

HDB (under MND) will review all the clinics to prioritise rental fee discount for them to provide more affordable healthcare at HDB estates, etc nationwide.
Furthermore, more rental discount to those clinics with higher rental.

MOH will monitor (granting or discontinuing operational licence, etc) on all the clinics (especially those clinics with higher rental) to ensure quality of care is not being abused or compromised with providing lower healthcare cost to their customers.

In the future, HDB (under MND) & MOH will work together to ensure new bidders for clinics will not go to the highest bidder (bidding price will not be the key factor to win the bid) but to base on quality of care and medical commitment, etc of the shortlisted bidders.

So only goes to the bidders who have links to govt. So SGrean.
 

ZhuMingQiang

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So only goes to the bidders who have links to govt. So SGrean.


Should depend on their proven history record with quality of care, medical commitment, etc.

All clinics will be required to maintain & provide higher standard of medical healthcare gradually.
 

cyke69sg

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Should depend on their proven history record with quality of care, medical commitment, etc.

All clinics will be required to maintain & provide higher standard of medical healthcare gradually.
In GP world what you referring to about proven history record with quality of care medical commitment? What is that? How you measure?

What standard?

In first place anyhow give antibiotics is a BAD practice if you ask infectious disease experts. Almost all GP clinic will FAIL.

But patient love to get antibiotics. So that is a WIN.

Point is what patients want and what medical authority want can be totally opposite.
 
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