Mr Eze Onyekpere, Lead Director, Centre for Social Justice, urged to the Federal Government to dedicate 15 per cent of the 2017 budget to the health sector to ensure adequate healthcare services for the masses. Delivering a paper, tagged “Budgeting for the right to health’’ on Tuesday in Abuja, Onyekpere urged the government to dedicate one per cent of the consolidated fund to basic healthcare provision as stipulated in the National Health Act signed into law in 2014.
He noted that funds at the federal and state levels have not been adequate to cater for healthcare needs of Nigeria. “We need a reduction of health expenditure coming from the pocket of Nigerians so that more of the resources will be coming from the government, insurance and other resources that do not tasked the individual at the time he needs services. “At the point he needs healthcare services there is no guarantee assurance that the resources for him to pay will be available. “We need a health budgeting system that is evidence base respond to the epidemiological data analysis in the society and that is adequate to take care of healthcare needs of the masses to attend to the minimum core obligations of the state in matter of healthcare,’’ he said.
Onyekpere, who pointed out that the government had failed to allocate the declared amount in 2015 and 2016 budget, added that available information revealed that it was not also captured in the 2017 budget. He explained that the implication of such failure was that there will be reduction in healthcare funding, among others, thereby increasing maternal and child mortality rate of the nation. Onyekpere described the funding the nation’s immunisation and family planning, among others, by donor agencies as a big shame. “The implication of that is that there will be reduced funding for healthcare services. We have heard about number of children and women who are dying giving birth, immunisation preventable diseases. “Even donors that are funding immunisation of our children are intending to withdraw such services and we do not want them to continue, we want to be able to take care of ourselves. “If we say we are sovereign country, independent, we are proud of our nation, we do not have to get foreigners to pay for our women to give birth, we do not have to get foreigners to pay for our children to be immunised,’’ he said.
Similarly, Dr Mike Ogirima, the NMA President, urged the State, Local and Federal Governments to implement the National Health Action promptly. According to him, the association will stage a road walk to the presidency on Oct. 26 to deliver a copy of the Act to the State House to press home their demands. “It is unfortunate that two years after the enactment of the Act its operationalisation has not commenced. “This is a document that guarantees access to quality and affordable healthcare to all Nigerians and the time to implement the provision is now,’’ Ogirima said.
Source:Pulse Nigeria