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WHO seeks operationalisation of Nigeria’s health law

By Adamu Abuh and Ameh Ochojila, Abuja
27 July 2022   |   2:51 am
World Health Organisation (WHO) has pledged support for operationalisation of Nigeria’s National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) Act to end out-of-pocket expenditure in the sector.

World Health Organisation headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, May 22, 2006. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/Files<br />

World Health Organisation (WHO) has pledged support for operationalisation of Nigeria’s National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) Act to end out-of-pocket expenditure in the sector.

The global agency observed that Nigeria has a high out-of-pocket expenditure of more than 70 per cent on health and over 60 per cent of the population, and in some states, up to 80 per cent in poverty due to ill-health.

Speaking at the first meeting of WHO Health Financing Mission in Nigeria with the NHIA management, yesterday, in Abuja, Technical Officer on Health Financing at WHO, Nigeria, Dr Francis Nwachukwu Ukwuije, urged a path for financial risk protection with a view to achieving a Universal Health Coverage (UHC) and health security.

He said the journey to risk protection in Nigeria through compulsory health insurance was important to national development.

His words: “I wish to state that as WHO, we have the mandate to support member-states in their priority areas towards health and national risk protection through health insurance as one of the accelerators that the country has chosen, and also via universal heath coverage.”

In his remarks, the leader of the delegation and Country Representative, Dr. Walter Kazadi Molumbo, said WHO believes that implementation of the Act holds the key to transforming access to healthcare in Nigeria for the most populous black nation to achieve universal health coverage.

Also speaking, the Director-General of NHIA, Prof. Mohammed Sambo, observed that the best way of achieving UHC was to provide financial risk protection for the people, adding that the mechanism to attaining this remains compulsory health insurance.

He noted that with the signing of the Act by President Muhammadu Buhari two months ago, the trajectory and roadmap for achieving UHC in Nigeria had been clearly defined, hence the need to ensure that the law is not only operationalised, but also put into the best use for the teeming population.

Sambo explained that the NHIA Act had made provisions for the establishment of Vulnerable Group Fund to cater for the health insurance of 92 million Nigerians.

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