Kenya health sector reforms and roadmap towards uhc by Dr Isaaq Odongo, MOH Kenya
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Transcript of Kenya health sector reforms and roadmap towards uhc by Dr Isaaq Odongo, MOH Kenya
Kenya Health Sector Reforms and Roadmap Towards
Universal Health Coverage
Dr. Izaaq Odongo Head, Department of
Curative and Rehabilitative Health Services Ministry of Health, Kenya
Outline
Introduction – Policy and Legal Environment for UHC
Selected Health Indicators
Financing of the health sector
Some key reforms/programmes towards UHC
Key sector challenges/issues
Moving forward - Roadmap
Policy and Legal Environment for UHC
Kenya Vision 2030 – Affordable and quality healthcare for healthy and productive population
The Constitution of Kenya 2010: – The right to health, including the right to emergency
care and reproductive health – Devolved system of government
The Kenya Health Policy, 2014-30 – achievement
of universal health coverage Kenya Health Bill, 2014 – mirrors the
Constitution
Status of Selected Health Indicators
The health sector recorded improvements in some of the health indicators in recent years:
Infant Mortality Rate declined from 77 per 1000 live births in 2003 to about 52 per 1000 2010
Under Five Mortality declined from 115 to 74 liver births over the same period
Newborn Mortality Rate declined from 33 to 31
per 1000 over the same period
Full immunization against major illnesses improved from 58 per cent in 2003 to 83 per cent currently
Status of Selected Health Indicators Cont..
Maternal Mortality Rate increased from 414 per 100,000 in 2003 to 488 per 100,000 women in 2010
HIV/AIDS prevalence declined from 13 per cent in 2000 to 5.6 per cent in 2012
Family planning has increased from 39 to 46 per cent
Life Expectancy has increased from 58 years to 60 years between 1993 and 2010
Where the money comes from - Who pays in Kenya?
30 32
29 36
29 20
11 10 1 2
0
20
40
60
80
100
2009/10 2012/13*
% s
har
e
Households Government Donors Employers Others
Key messages: o High out of pocket spending – a challenge to access o Government funding has increased in nominal terms – a good
development o Donor funding going down – a good indicator for sustainability
Governments commitment to the health sector is shown through increased allocations
Public health expenditure as % of total government spending
Budget allocations before and after the devolution
15.4 16.7 19.9
23.8
28.6 29.7 32.7
40.0
46
59
74
-
1.0
2.0
3.0
4.0
5.0
6.0
7.0
8.0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
200
2/0
3
200
3/0
4
200
4/0
5
200
5/0
6
200
6/0
7
200
7/0
8
200
8/0
9
200
9/1
0
201
0/1
1
201
1/1
2
201
2/1
3
Tota
l H
ealt
h E
xpen
dit
ure,
Ksh
s B
illi
on
s
% o
f T
ota
l G
ove
rn
men
t S
pen
din
g
.
Total per capita expenditure on health has been increasing
It is currently estimated at about 66 – NHA 2012/13 against a benchmark of 60 (WHO)?
• Source: DPHK 2012
External Resources for Health: - Skewed towards one partner
- A great proportion is off – budget - A challenge on sustainability
USG
53%
Global
Fund
11%
DFID
8%
World
Bank IDA
7%
GAVI
7%
EU and
European
bilaterals
6%
UN Family
5%
Other
3%
Estimated split, FY 2012-13
35%
65%
Location of support, FY 2012/13
On-budget Off-budget
• Source: Household Health Expenditure and Utilization Survey, 2013
Catastrophic health spending – ( Households in 25 counties spend >/= 40 % of Non-food
Expenditure on Health)
Some Key Reforms and Programmes Towards UHC
Free maternity services in all public health facilities since 2013 – facility utilization has increased from 43 to 67 per cent
Free primary healthcare in all public primary healthcare facilities (about 3,300 facilities)
Major programme to equip major public hospitals across the country with modern diagnostic equipment (94 facilities) – contracts already signed with suppliers
A National Referral Strategy has been
developed and already being piloted
Some Key Reforms and Programmes Towards UHC – Cont…
Strengthening of PPP initiatives, including the Beyond Zero Campaign
Health insurance subsidies through
NHIF targeting disadvantaged groups
County governments: Provision of infrastructure and equipment
for health facilities e.g. new wards, Provision of Ambulances, Recruitment of additional health workers
High direct Out of Pocket Expenditure limiting access to the poor and highly inefficient
Government allocation to health, though increasing is still inadequate
Inefficiencies – in allocation (mismatch) and utilization
High external resource contribution:
Non-alignment / un-harmonized
Fragmented and mostly off-budget
Limited insurance/pre-payment – Less than a quarter
NHIF is the major insurer (18 – 20%) of the population
Private insurance coverage also low - < 2 per cent
Key Sector Challenges/Issues
Moving Forward - Roadmap
Increase funding to the sector through government, donors and private sector
Minimize fragmentation of financing pools – both insurance and general tax revenue
Define and provide a basic package of essential health services to be purchased from both public and private sector using pooled funds
Strengthen the National Hospital Insurance Fund to expand coverage
Moving Forward Cont…
Reform the provider payment mechanism to focus on results and efficiency (includes general tax funding)
Strengthen the quality assurance and accreditation system
Create an enabling legal and regulatory framework for both public and private sector to provide defined packages
Strong government leadership of the sector