THISDAY

Oyo-Ita Hails Rwanda’s Community Health Scheme

-

The Head of Civil Service of the Federation, Mrs Winifred Oyo- Ita, has hailed Rwanda’s Community-Based Health Insurance Scheme, describing it as a good learning experience from her ongoing post-conflict study tour of the country.

Speaking with the News Agency of Nigeria ( NAN) on Tuesday in Kigali, Oyo- Ita said that the introducti­on of the Rwandan version of health insurance in Nigeria could be considered.

She noted that the current National Health Insurance Scheme was not accessible to rural dwellers, hence the need for a community- based health insurance scheme.

“What I have seen here is that they have a very interestin­g Communityb­ased Health Insurance Scheme which we will be looking at very closely when we get back home.

“It allows a health insurance policy to be developed right at the grassroots, to improve health care services at the community level.

“Rwanda has implemente­d this and their citizens are enjoying it; maternal and child mortality rate has dropped drasticall­y due to this scheme; so, we will try to replicate this in Nigeria.”

She noted that the country’s health policy starts from the grassroots and that the members of the community were given the opportunit­y to choose whom they trust to be their the health attendants.

NAN reports that Rwanda, a country shattered by the genocide against the Tutsis by the Hutus, with most of its health systems defunct until 11 years ago when it introduced the community- based insurance known as ` Mutuelle de santé’.

Mutelle de santé is a health insurance scheme financed both by the state and individual­s’ contributi­ons through insurance and direct fees for services.

Members pay annual premiums of approximat­ely six dollars per family member (increased in 2011 from two dollars per person) with a 10 per cent service fee paid for each visit to a health centre or hospital.

Rwanda’s communityb­ased health insurance programme, seen as a universal health care model, is said to have been the focus of several large studies and much debate in global health policy.

Many government­s in sub- Saharan Africa and south Asia have studied Rwanda’s approach, particular­ly mechanisms to achieve high coverage, which exceeded 90 per cent by 2010

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria