Jamaica Gleaner

Gov’t hurting NHF

Agency unable to access some supplies as parent owes it more than $4b

- Arthur Hall Associate Editor

SCORES OF Jamaicans who depend on the National Health Fund (NHF) for benefits could be at risk as the agency faces a cash crisis that has developed because it cannot collect billions of dollars from beneficiar­ies, including the Ministry of Health.

At the end of the last fiscal year, the NHF was owed $4.5 billion, with the health ministry accounting for 94 per cent of that amount.

To compound the problem facing the NHF, $2.9 billion of what it was owed by the health ministry was overdue in excess of 90 days, this despite the NHF writing off $2 billion that it was owed by the health ministry.

That is one of the major findings of a performanc­e audit of the NHF conducted by the Auditor General’s Department and tabled in Parliament on Tuesday.

SUPPLIERS WITHHELD ORDERS

In the report, Auditor General Pamela Monroe Ellis noted that some suppliers withheld orders from the NHF because, with it awaiting payment from the health ministry, it failed to make timely payments of its bills 95.8 per cent of the time.

“NHF’s ability to settle obligation­s with suppliers was ... constraine­d by a build-up in outstandin­g collection­s from its sale of pharmaceut­icals and sundries to public health-care facilities,” said the report.

Monroe Ellis noted that there were 56 instances in the 2015-2016 fiscal year when the NHF ran out of pharmaceut­icals and sundries because suppliers refused to deliver as they had not been paid for previous deliveries.

“The NHF sought to reduce the level of receivable­s from the (health ministry) through regular dialogue and implementa­tion of a performanc­e-tracking indicator in the financial year 2015-16, but those efforts were largely ineffectiv­e,” said the auditor general in the report.

“The NHF must move with alacrity to secure a permanent solution to the problem of receivable­s outstandin­g from the MOH,” added Monroe Ellis in her recommenda­tions.

 ??  ?? In this January file photo, a part of Mandela Highway in St Catherine was dug up to facilitate repairs to a broken National Water Commission main. However, the massive hole remained open for some time, reducing the road to single-lane traffic and...
In this January file photo, a part of Mandela Highway in St Catherine was dug up to facilitate repairs to a broken National Water Commission main. However, the massive hole remained open for some time, reducing the road to single-lane traffic and...

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