The minister for Health, Ms Ummy Mwalimu, tables the estimated income and expenditure plan for her ministry for the financial year 2023/24 in Parliament in Dodoma yesterday. PHOTO | MERCIFUL MUNUO
Summary
·
The budget
has increased from the Sh1.1 trillion that was allocated to the docket in the
financial year 2022/23
Dar es Salaam. The Ministry of Health has unveiled a Sh1.2 trillion budget for the 2023/24 fiscal year, with priorities aimed at further improving health services in the country.
The budget has increased from the
Sh1.1 trillion that was allocated to the docket in the financial year 2022/23.
Presenting the estimates of her
ministry yesterday in Parliament, the Minister for Health, Ms Ummy Mwalimu,
asked MPs to approve the amount for the year 2023/24.
She said the first priority for the
budget will be to strengthen the services of prevention against diseases,
including vaccination services, nutritional services, sanitation, and
environmental health services, as well as strengthening health services at the
community level.
In doing so, what will be
implemented includes strengthening the implementation of vaccination
interventions for children, for which an amount of Sh114.3 billion (from the
main budget) has been allocated.
Another priority, according to Ms
Mwalimu’s speech, will be to strengthen the availability and quality of health
services provided by public health centres at all levels.
Along with other things, the
ministry has planned to build and renovate the infrastructure to be able to
provide health services found at the national level to the regional referral
hospitals, where Sh91.8 billion has been allocated.
The availability and control of
medicines, medical equipment, reagents, and safe blood will also be
strengthened at all levels of health care delivery at an estimated budget of
Sh205 billion.
In addition, maternal and child
health services will be strengthened to reduce maternal and infant deaths at a
cost of Sh16.2 billion.
For a long time, many Tanzanians
have been forced to travel abroad or go to local cities like Dar es Salaam to
seek specialist treatment, but the Ministry of Health has outlined strategies
to further strengthen and move such services closer to the people in the year
2023/24.
In that regard, an estimated Sh23
billion has been set aside for, among other things, establishing a programme to
cover the high-quality medical services provided by local hospitals.
These programmes include kidney
transplants, brain transplants for children, hearing aids for children, and
performing brain surgery without opening the skull.
“We will strengthen the
infrastructure at the Jakaya Kikwete Cardiac Institute (JKCI), Ocean Road
Cancer Institute, Muhimbili Orthopaedic Institute, Kibong’oto Special Hospital,
Bugando, Mbeya, and Benjamin Mkapa Regional Referral Hospitals,” explained Ms
Mwalimu.
The Ministry stated that in order to
control pandemics, a budget of Sh20 billion will be used to implement various
interventions, including the development of highly infectious disease treatment
units.
Likewise, to strengthen the
availability of experts in the sector’s intermediate fields, an amount of Sh83
billion has been allocated to help prepare and set a long-term plan for health
service providers to meet their needs (human resource planning).
“The total amount of money requested
by the Ministry is Shi1.2 trillion to be able to implement the goals set for
the fiscal year 2023/24,” said the minister when she was asking the
parliamentarians to pass the budget estimates she presented.
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