By NEVILLE OTUKI, notuki@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- President Kenyatta said the scheme would be rolled out as planned to save millions of Kenyans living in the countryside the burden of seeking specialised treatment such as kidney dialysis in Nairobi.
- The president insisted that supply of the equipment to Level Five hospitals in the 47 counties is firmly on course after last week’s commissioning of the new units in Machakos.
President Uhuru Kenyatta on Monday said the supply of
Sh38 billion national government-backed medical equipment to county
hospitals would continue despite stiff opposition from governors.
Mr Kenyatta said the scheme, whose legality the governors
have challenged in the High Court, would be rolled out as planned to
save millions of Kenyans living in the countryside the burden of seeking
specialised treatment such as kidney dialysis in Nairobi.
“Soon, a hospital near your home will be
well-equipped. You will not have to travel to Nairobi or overseas for
specialised treatment,” he said even as he warned against politicisation
of the initiative.
The President’s word came after three months of
governors’ intense opposition to the scheme, which they see as the
national government’s attempt to roll back devolution by taking back
some of the functions legally given to the counties.
The governors have argued that the seven-year
equipment leasing deal with private suppliers is unconstitutional
because it was done without their involvement despite the fact that
health is a devolved function.
The governors are particularly concerned that
contrary to the national government’s insistence that the equipment is
being supplied at no cost to the counties, the deal will see a portion
of their health budgets hived off to service the lease agreement.
But Mr Kenyatta on Monday insisted that supply of
the equipment to Level Five hospitals in the 47 counties is firmly on
course after last week’s commissioning of the new units in Machakos.
“Given the consequences of further delay, it is
clear that this scheme can no longer be politicised. There is no good
politics which prevents X-ray or dialysis machines from reaching those
who need them,” he said in his Madaraka Day speech.
Mr Kenyatta said equipping hospitals with the
machines is part of his government’s plan to provide universal
healthcare with the help of the National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF).
Kenya on Monday marked 52 years of self-rule after
breaking free from the grip of colonialism in 1963. It was during the
first Madaraka Day that the country’s founding President Jomo Kenyatta
identified ignorance, poverty and disease as Kenya’s biggest
socio-economic challenges.
“That long war against disease continues. And we
will fight it until every Kenyan has the very highest standard of
medical care, for our people are our most important asset,” Mr Kenyatta,
the eldest son of the founding president, said on Monday.
The President launched the scheme at State House
Nairobi three months ago, but no governor attended the function as a
signal of their opposition to the plan.
The list of equipment to be supplied includes
modern theatres, surgical and sterilisation equipment, laboratory
equipment, kidney dialysis machines, ICU facilities, digital X-ray
machines, ultrasound and imaging machines.
The national government reckons that leasing the
medical equipment as opposed to buying would help cut costs and increase
efficiency because the leasors would bear the cost of routine
maintenance.
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