THISDAY Healthcare Dialogue, Global Health Leaders Challenge Nigeria on Universal Coverage
Participants at THISDAY Healthcare
Policy Dialogue/Summit, which included global health leaders, have urged
government at all levels in Nigeria to be more committed to Universal
Health Coverage (UHC) – a scheme that has become a priority goal
worldwide.
The Health Dialogue held
on Thursday in Abuja was in conjunction with the Federal Ministry of
Health. It attracted global health leaders, policy makers, health
practitioners, parliamentarians, development partners, academic, civil
society organizations, private sectors and the media.
Thursday
Summit with the theme “The Journey to Universal Health Coverage in
Nigeria,” was a follow up to the high-level policy dialogue on
transforming the Nigeria healthcare sector through appropriate financing
held earlier in the year by THISDAY.
The
summit agreed that commitment to Universal Health Coverage was an
important way to expand access to effective healthcare services, reduce
financial hardship during illness, and improve health outcomes.
It
discussed extensively Nigeria’s current health financing reform efforts
towards UHC, the progress and challenges of the on-going reform
efforts, and made strong call for political and technical support to
advance progress towards UHC.
The
summit noted that the overall objective of the High Level Forum on UHC
was critically to assess the progress towards UHC in Nigeria through a
review of the country status of implementation and sharing of global
experiences.
Exploring the place of
health as a driver of economic growth, the experts recognised that the
future of Nigeria success depends on its ability to transform
non-renewable, and often volatile natural capital into productive wealth
by investing more in human capital.
Giving
a keynote speech at the event, the Director General of the World Health
Organisation (WHO), Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, described lack of
access to quality healthcare as an outrage, while commending THISDAY for
its intervention to set the agenda on effective and efficient
healthcare service delivery system.
Ghebreyesus explained that nations must do all they could to implement Universal Health Coverage for their citizens.
According
to him, “The World Health Organisation was founded 70 years ago on the
conviction that health is a human right to be enjoyed by all people, not
a privilege for the few. Although much has changed in 70 years, that
conviction hasn’t.
“The term
‘universal health coverage’ didn’t exist in 1948, but if it did, it
would have been in our constitution. Universal health coverage means
much more than just health insurance, and it means much more than just
health care.
“It means ensuring
people can get quality health services, where and when they need them,
without suffering financial hardship. Or to put it in another way, no
one should get sick and die just because they are poor, or because the
services they need are too far away. ‘’
Explaining
further that the scheme also includes the full spectrum of services,
from disease prevention and health promotion to treatment,
rehabilitation and palliative care, the Director-General of WHO revealed
that today, more than half the world’s population lacks access to
essential health services, and almost 100 million people are pushed into
extreme poverty every year because of the costs of paying for care out
of their own pockets.
He said: “This
outrage must end. No one should have to choose between buying medicine
and buying food for their family. No one should have to choose between
death and poverty.
“There’s no single
path to UHC. All countries must find their own way, in the context of
their own social, political and economic circumstances. But the
foundation everywhere must be a strong health system, based on primary
care, with an emphasis on disease prevention and health promotion.
‘’Such
health systems do not only provide the best health outcomes; they’re
also the best defence against outbreaks and other health emergencies; in
that sense, UHC and health security are truly two sides of the same
coin.’’
While stating that there are
many steps on the road to UHC, he said that the key was political
commitment and for that reason, Nigeria’s Presidential Summit on
universal health coverage in 2014 was a vital step.
“The
National Health Act passed the same year lays a firm foundation for
making UHC a reality, by guaranteeing a basic package of services. The
government’s ambition to reach 100 million Nigerians with a basic
package of primary healthcare services is truly admirable’’, he added.
He
congratulated the government for its commitment to allocating at least
1% of consolidated revenue from the national budget to the Basic
Healthcare Provision Fund.
The WHO
boss stressed further that financial investments were required to build
strong health systems that deliver quality services, adding that’s
exactly what they are: investments, not costs. They’re investments in a
safer, fairer and more prosperous future.
He
said the question therefore was not whether countries can afford to
invest in their health systems but whether they can afford not to. He
said universal health coverage was not just an investment in a healthier
future; it’s a down payment on a fairer, safer and more prosperous
future.
Also in a goodwill message,
the representative of the Global Financing Facility Secretariat For
Every Woman Every Child (GFF), Mr. Luc Laviolette, said that the GFF was
started in 2014 in recognition that a different financing model would
be required in order to achieve the health related aspects of the
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
He
said looking back at the global performance of the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs) related to health raises the alarm that a lot
needed to be done and also a different financing model will be required.
He
said: ‘’There is also a lot of Official Development Assistance (ODA)
for health but when you look at it, there is a lot of gaps, which at the
time stood at $33 billion annually and also, financial flows from the
private sources into various franchise, agencies and directly to the
households. These private flows far exceed the ODA.
‘’So
it was to develop a model that focuses on all types of financing. First
and foremost, increasing domestic resources, this is at the heart of
what GFF is doing. We are extremely pleased to be able to support in
this someway in Nigeria.
“The funds
from the Trust Funds, which is established at the Secretariat with
financing from a range of donors came from the private sector
department. This is designed with the World Bank financing in your
country. In Nigeria, all of this in the context of investment for
development and there are multiple World Bank financed projects that are
linked with the GFF financing.’’
On
his part, the Health Advisor DFID and Co-Chair, Health-Developmenr
Partners Group, Mr. Chris Lewis, said that Nigeria had both the second
highest total maternal mortality and the second highest child deaths
total in the world.
‘’We’ve struggled
to improve health coverage over the past 25 years and we have a
transition of the donors funding mechanism for these services
transitioning out in the coming years’’, he said.
‘’So,
welcome in this boat of ship of change that is ultimately required in
this country. People need access to health services, including
prevention, promotion and treatment which make efficient services to be
effective without exposing the user to financial hardship. This is the
very definition of universal health coverage.’’
FG Renames Basic Healthcare Provision Fund Huwe
The climax of the event was the launch and renaming of the Basic Health Care Provision Fund (BHCPF). It was renamed ‘’Huwe.’’
With
a new logo, the federal government announced that the first phase of
the programme would soon commence in Abia, Niger and Osun states.
The
Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole, stated this while presenting
the keynote address, saying the logo would be displayed at accredited
facilities where citizens can access the basic minimum packages of
health services.
According to the
Minister, Huwe, an Ebira word, means life, and was derived after an
extensive crowd sourcing campaign, for an easy to recall, short syllable
word that depicts good health in a local language.
The
BHCPF is intended to ensure monies are disbursed, managed and accounted
for in a transparent manner, ensure that funds flow from source (at the
federal level) to service delivery points, creating performance
incentives for providers, increase service utilisation and health worker
productivity, and monitor service delivery, including improvements in
service delivery readiness in line with accreditations standards and
operating protocols.
The Minister
said BHCPF was intended to complement ongoing efforts of the States and
Local Governments, to mobilise resources for health, and are not
intended to provide excuses to underfund or deprioritise funding for
health.
According to him, “The Basic
Health Care Provision Fund provides the platform to expand high impact
and life-saving interventions to all Nigerians.
“It
guarantees an explicit package of services to be delivered at the
facility level, through the NHIS and State Health Insurance Agencies
(SSHIAs), and operational budgets to facilities to improve quality of
service delivery based on a quality improvement plan with quantifiable
outcome measures.
The National
Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA) and the State Primary
Health Care Development Agency (SPHCDA) will assess on an annual basis
the improvements in quality of care based on a set of metrics.”
Adewole
explained further that the BHCPF is in recognition of the fact that
Nigeria’s future success depends on its ability, to transform
non-renewable (and often volatile) natural capital into productive
wealth by investing more in human capital.
He
added, “Within the health sector, we now know, based on our research in
the last few years of this administration, that targeted coverage
expansion for high impact reproductive maternal, neonatal, and child
health (RMNCH) interventions to underserved populations have an
immediate impact on the health of women and children. Several programs
piloted by Government and partners across the country have demonstrated
these.”
While also contributing to
the conversation, Zainab Ahmed, Minister of State for Budget and
National Planning, said that in terms of monitoring and evaluation for
the health sector, the federal government had taken into account the
health strategies of the Ministry of Health to the Economy Recovery and
Growth Plan (ERGP).
According to her,
‘’And we also identified specific key priorities actions that must be
undertaken within the four years of the planned period. So in the ERGP,
we seek to prioritise health and take actions according to the third
pillar which is investing in our people.
‘’Specifically,
the ERGP target vitalising primary healthcare systems and the roll out
of universal health coverage and also strengthening of the delivery
beyond PHC systems and partnering with the private sector in
constructing mega health centres.
‘’All
these are geared towards achieving the broad outcomes of improving the
availability, accessibility, as well as the quality of health services
in our country. Expanding health services to all local governments is an
imperative that we have planned for. Also, providing and financing
health services, preventing infant mortality and maternal mortality. We
aspire to reach the basic goals.’’
She
added that the federal government had planned to spend in areas where
the outcomes will quickly pull us out of recession, saying in 2015, the
federal government released N16 billion; in 2016, N28 billion; in 2017,
N45 billion. She added that the trajectory was a positive one, promising
to attain the 1% Consolidated Revenue in conjunction with the National
Assembly.
The minister further
explained: ‘’One other thing we are doing is to block the leakages in
all the sectors, if you just keep releasing resources without monitoring
the impact of the resources and blocking leakages, we still won’t have
the impact. Nigeria as a country has one of the poorest health
indicators, as a government we intend to improve significantly these
indicators within the tenure of this administration. ‘’
Obaigbena: Why We Are Spearheading the Advocacy
Earlier,
while kick-starting the policy dialogue, the Chairman, THISDAY/Arise
News Channel, Mr. Nduka Obaigbena, emphasized the need to invest more in
the health of Nigerians.
He said
that the dialogue was to help shape policy towards human capital
development, ensure that the nation cares for it citizens of the country
and that every life matters.
According
to him, “At THISDAY, we are just facilitators, bringing policy makers,
experts, bankers and financiers together to ensure we can move towards a
very healthy nation, and of course an educated nation.
Welcoming the participants, the Chairman said Nigeria needs enabling laws and financing.
In a communiqué after the dialogue, the summit resolved as follow:
*
Commended THISDAY, Federal Ministry of Health, WHO, World Bank, UNFPA,
USAID/HFG and Sterling Bank for jointly supporting the dialogue on UHC.
*
Commended the efforts made by the government of Nigeria so far in this
regard, and called for more budgetary allocation for funding of
healthcare services in Nigeria towards attainment of UHC.
*
Critically considered the progress and challenges of the ongoing reform
efforts of government, especially the National Health Acts passed into
law in 2014 which has laid a firm foundation for making UHC a reality,
by guaranteeing the basic health package services, while commending
President Muhammadu Buhari for formally launching the UHC and made a
strong call for political and technical support at all levels to advance
progress towards UHC through full implementation of the Basic Health
Care Provision Fund (BHCPF) initiative as an opportunity for achieving
UHC.
* It also agreed that the Basic
Health Care Provision Fund, now known as HUWE will provide the platform
to expand high impact and life-saving interventions to all Nigerians. It
guarantees:
• An explicit package of
services to be delivered at the facility level, through the NHIS and
State Health Insurance Agencies (SSHIAs);
•
Operational budgets to facilities to improve quality of service
delivery based on a quality improvement plan with quantifiable outcome
measures. The National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA)
and the State Primary Health Care Development Agency (SPHCDA) will
assess on an annual basis, the improvements in quality of care based on a
set of metrics.
* The dialogue called on government to focus on investment on the explicit package of services defined under the Huwe program.
*
The dialogue called for a high level advocacy to the Nigeria Governors
forum to mobilize enough funds for support of healthcare delivery at the
State level.
* Called for the need
to attach public health indicators to the budgetary requests; while
expressing satisfaction on the quality of contributions from all
stakeholders and was optimistic that the Federal Government will
leverage on the outcomes of the dialogue to achieve Universal Health
Coverage.
According to him, “The
Basic Health Care Provision Fund provides the platform to expand high
impact and life-saving interventions to all Nigerians.
“It
guarantees an explicit package of services to be delivered at the
facility level, through the NHIS and State Health Insurance Agencies
(SSHIAs), and operational budgets to facilities to improve quality of
service delivery based on a quality improvement plan with quantifiable
outcome measures.
The dialogue was
attended by eminent personalities, including the Governor of Delta
State, Dr. Ifeanyi Okowa; Wife of the Senate President, Mrs. Toyin
Saraki; Chairman Senate Committee on Health, Senator Lanre Tejuosho; the
Minister of Health, Professor Isaac Adewole; Minister (State) Health,
Dr. Osagie Ehanire; Minister for State Budget and National Planning,
Zainab Ahmed; Director-General WHO, Tedros Adhanom Gbebreyesus; Country
Director World Bank Nigeria, Rachid Benmasoud; Representative of Bill
and Milinda Gate Foundation, Paulin Basinga; Representative of Sterling
Bank; and CEO Dangote Foundation, Zouera Youssoufoa, among others.
Culled from https://www.thisdaylive.com
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