Under the new tender, an officer, spouse and five children up to 25 years will be covered. PHOTO | JARED NYATAYA
Summary
- The heavy task of covering the 131,151 officers will now fall on the shoulders of a consortium consisting of up to three insurance firms.
- The lucrative tender is set to run for a renewable term of two years and three months.
- Under the cover, each officer will have a spouse and up to five children aged between zero and 25 years covered.
The Interior ministry has launched the search for private
medical insurers to cover police and prison officers in a move set to
deny the National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF) annual premiums worth
Sh5 billion.
The heavy task of covering the 131,151
officers will now fall on the shoulders of a consortium consisting of up
to three insurance firms, the National Police Service says in tender
documents.
The lucrative tender is set to run for a renewable term of two years and three months.
“The
comprehensive medical insurance cover has been designed to provide
in-patient, outpatient and additional benefits as provided in the
detailed scope of the cover,” says the National Police Service in the
bid documents published on its website.
Under the cover, each officer will have a spouse and up to five children aged between zero and 25 years covered.
The move by the National Police Service to put its officers
under a new health scheme comes barely a few weeks after the Treasury
barred the NHIF from providing commercial insurance services.
Treasury
Cabinet Secretary Ukur Yatani in December directed NHIF to either drop
commercial insurance services or abide by Section 19 of the Insurance
Act that would put it under tehe Insurance Regulatory Authority (IRA).
Among other things, the IRA monitors service providers for financial soundness and ability to honour claims.
Police
officers have over the years formed an important cog of NHIF’s special
medical schemes from which it collected Sh12.7 billion worth of premium
in 2017/2018, audited report shows.
The exit of the
government agencies is set to dent the financials of the NHIF even as
the State hinges its hopes on it to support its universal health push.
At
least 40 parastatals and 15 State-controlled agencies, from which the
NHIF has been collecting more than Sh1.9 billion per year in premiums,
are set to follow suit.
That will leave the NHIF to
rely on contribution from members that stood at Sh32.9 billion in the
financial year to June 2018 as compared to Sh29.8 billion the previous
financial year.
The National Police Service says firms
interested in the tender must execute a bid security of Sh100 million in
form of bank guarantee.
It also wants bidders to
submit a performance security guarantee of 10 percent of contract sum
before the contract is signed. The tender is set to close on February
12.
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