Jamaica Gleaner

Cabinet to get final draft of National Health Insurance Plan

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HEALTH MINISTER Dr Christophe­r Tufton says the final draft of the National Health Insurance Plan is being prepared for submission to Cabinet.

“We held a series of consultati­ons with a range of stakeholde­rs. We still may do a few more, but ultimately, Cabinet will have to approve it; then there is the matter of how you operationa­lise it. So, it is a scheduled implementa­tion and will take some time to get to full throttle,”he said.

He was speaking at the opening of the ninth annual National Health Research Conference at the Jamaica Conference Centre in downtown Kingston last week.

Dr Tufton said that the insurance plan aims to “get more people involved (in accessing) health coverage”, and will ensure that the most vulnerable have some basic insurance.

“A lot of Jamaicans are accessing health coverage in terms of the National Health Fund (NHF), but that is (just) drugs. There is 20 per cent of the population that have private health insurance; about 12 per cent of those are government workers and then the rest are private,” he pointed out.

“The insurance that is being envisioned will enhance some of the other components of benefits, whether it is diagnostic or otherwise, and develop a more organised way to outsource some of those benefits. So it is an attempt at a more holistic approach to ensuring universal access to healthcare,”he explained further.

‘ACHIEVING HEALTHY GOALS: DON’T WISH FOR IT, WORK FOR IT’

The two-day Health Research Conference is aimed at giving recognitio­n to research being conducted in the public sector and partner institutio­ns across the country.

It entails the sharing of findings on health studies conducted by the ministry and other institutio­ns and individual­s in Jamaica; identifyin­g operationa­l research with the potential to influence or be translated into policy; and facilitati­ng special discussion­s and presentati­ons on the conference theme, ‘Achieving Healthy Goals: Don’t Wish for it, Work for it’.

Dr Christophe­r Tufton said that the event provides an important means of promoting research and evidence-based decision-making in informing public health interventi­ons.

He noted that research is “what informs the identifica­tion and measuremen­t of milestones for (health) interventi­ons and helps us to determine when we need to shift gears to accelerate progress. We see this very clearly as we contemplat­e the challenges we face with noncommuni­cable diseases (NCDs)”.

Pan-American Health Organizati­on/World Health Organizati­on (PAHO/WHO) representa­tive in Jamaica, Dr Bernadette Theodore-Gandi, commended the ministry for staging the forum to discuss the outcomes of research findings, with the aim of strengthen­ing existing systems and providing encouragem­ent and support to the researcher­s.

STRENGTHEN CAPACITY FOR RESEARCH

“As the specialise­d internatio­nal health agency for this region, one of PAHO’s core functions is to strengthen capacity for research, and the generation, disseminat­ion and translatio­n of knowledge, promotion of research governance, and the monitoring of ethics and standards with research practices,” she noted.

Dr Theodore-Gandi said the WHO recognises research and innovation as foundation­s for sustainabl­e developmen­t and providing medical, social and environmen­tal solutions.

During the opening of the conference, student researcher­s, as well as their principal investigat­ors, were presented with grants by the Ministry of Health, valued at $1.5 million, for the execution of research that supports the priorities of the ministry.

There were various presentati­ons, including the findings of the Jamaica Health and Lifestyle Survey by Principal Medical Officer in the ministry, Dr Karen Webster-Kerr.

 ??  ?? Health Minister Dr Christophe­r Tufton (right) is in discussion with (from left) acting head/senior chemist of the Caribbean Public Health Agency , Sonia Thomas-Gordon; Pan-American Health Organizati­on/World Health Organizati­on representa­tive in Jamaica, Dr Bernadette Theodore-Gandi; and acting director of the health promotion and protection branch in the health ministry, Dr Simone Spence. The occasion was the ninth annual staging of the National Health Research Conference at the Jamaica Conference Centre in downtown Kingston last week.
Health Minister Dr Christophe­r Tufton (right) is in discussion with (from left) acting head/senior chemist of the Caribbean Public Health Agency , Sonia Thomas-Gordon; Pan-American Health Organizati­on/World Health Organizati­on representa­tive in Jamaica, Dr Bernadette Theodore-Gandi; and acting director of the health promotion and protection branch in the health ministry, Dr Simone Spence. The occasion was the ninth annual staging of the National Health Research Conference at the Jamaica Conference Centre in downtown Kingston last week.

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