Summary
- The doubling of the number of hospital accredited by the National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF) comes as a relief to many Kenyans who lack access to primary healthcare.
- For years, the low number of NHIF-accredited hospitals has put members at a disadvantage by limiting their choices and increasing medical bills paid out of pocket.
The doubling of the number
of hospital accredited by the National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF)
comes as a relief to many Kenyans who lack access to primary healthcare.
For
years, the low number of NHIF-accredited hospitals has put members at a
disadvantage by limiting their choices and increasing medical bills
paid out of pocket.
The health facilities have risen
from 4,281 in 2017 to 8,189 in June this year. Of the 3,908 new
healthcare providers, 3,094 are government dispensaries and health
centres.
More members who live in rural areas will now
be able to access proper healthcare from doctors instead of
self-medicating to avoid expensive hospital care or having to travel
long distances to seek treatment.
It will also reduce
the number of late diagnosis of non-communicable diseases such as
diabetes and cancer which are increasingly burdening insurers and
patients because they are costlier to treat in late stages.
The increased number of NHIF-accredited health facilities
provides a good opportunity to ease pressure on the national referral
hospitals. However, the expanded list will only be beneficial if the
government dispensaries and health centres have drugs, diagnostic
machines, well-equipped laboratories, and skilled personnel.
Most
government dispensaries suffer chronic shortages of critical drugs and
specialised care, forcing patients to travel to Kenyatta National
Hospital and Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital for treatment. Those who
cannot travel, die from lack of medicines.
While the
NHIF has increased the number of accredited health facilities, it has
scaled back the treatments it pays for patients. For instance,
currently, the NHIF care package entails 20 sessions for radiotherapy,
and up to two sessions for brachytherapy for advanced cancer per year.
But
most cancer patients require 25 sessions of radiotherapy and three
sessions of brachytherapy, for those with cervical cancer. When the
cover lapses, the patients abandon treatment and the disease recurs.
Granted it is a tricky balancing act for the NHIF, but it can do more to cushion patients against financial hardships.
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