Nairobi: The government has partnered with health insurers to implement a Joint Anti-Fraud Action aimed at eradicating ghost patients, penalising malpractice, and restoring public trust in the healthcare system.
According to Kenya News Agency, the Ministry of Health is working with strategic partners to address financial challenges in the health sector. Insurers have agreed to collaborate on the implementation of Taifa Care, focusing on key issues. In a strategic meeting held at the Ministry of Health headquarters in Nairobi, chaired by Cabinet Secretary Adan Duale, CEOs of medical insurance companies discussed partnerships, particularly regarding the Social Health Authority (SHA). The parties agreed on complementary coverage, shared claims and data, and aligned empanelment standards.
“Our goal is to provide access to quality and affordable healthcare for all Kenyans,” Duale stated, highlighting that health insurers will supplement the SHA package. This will include overseas care, elective procedures, premium add-ons, and co-financing of chronic care, alongside the SHA’s chronic and critical illness fund.
The meeting also addressed linking health insurers to the SHA’s centralised claims platform, to ensure real-time verification, enhanced processing, and prevention of multiple billing, in line with the Digital Health Act 2023 and Data Protection Act 2019. Additionally, harmonisation of accreditation criteria was discussed to enable equitable access to quality care.
Insurers requested the Ministry’s support to strengthen the National Health Registry for a standardised healthcare information platform and proposed a regulatory framework for drug pricing to promote transparency and integrity in the sector.
CS Duale acknowledged the structural challenges within the health system and noted ongoing efforts to address these through laws and data-backed reforms. He emphasized the importance of a public-private collaborative framework between the Ministry of Health, SHA, the Association of Private Insurers, and IRA, focusing on tariff alignment, data sharing, and fraud elimination.
The meeting was attended by key figures including Medical Services Principal Secretary Dr. Ouma Oluga, SHA CEO Dr. Mercy Mwangangi, Digital Health Authority CEO Eng. Anthony Lenayara, Dr. David Kariuki (CEO, KMPDC), and industry leaders like Njeri Njomo (CEO, Jubilee Health Insurance), Justine Kosgey (CEO, AAR Insurance), and Japeth Ogalloh (CEO, Old Mutual).