“The registration fee of a beneficiary per annum is much and we urge the managers to take another look at it. “We have already deposited N2.5 million in the accounts of Nenwe Community Mutual Health Association to ensure we started on a solid footing,’’ he said. Chukwu said that the foundation was also compiling a comprehensive data of all orphans of primary school age in the community with a view to training them. “Our mission is to bring succour to the less privileged and other vulnerable groups; our vision is towards a society free from the tears of poverty,’’ Chukwu said.
In an address, Mrs Akunna Ochor, Enugu State Coordinator, National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), commended the people of Nenwe for embracing the scheme. Ochor said that the community was the first in the South-East to embrace the Community Based Health Insurance Scheme. She said that it had been a tortuous journey to formalise the agreement between the managers and the community, remarking that all processes had been concluded. The coordinator expressed regret that most people in the rural communities are yet to appreciate the importance of the scheme, which she said would help them live a healthy life.
Ochor, who appealed to the people to embrace the scheme, said that there are several incentives in the scheme. “Any community that gets about 1,000 beneficiaries, government will intervene and assist pregnant women and children below five years in such communities free of charge,“ she said. Ochor urged the sponsors of the scheme to ensure its sustainability so as to reduce incidences of untimely deaths in the community. Mrs Elizabeth Ugwueke, one of the widows, praised the sponsor for the initiative. “You have wiped our tears and we will remain grateful to you for this intervention,’’ she said.
Source:Leadership Online