Business Day (Nigeria)

Experts call for improved healthcare financing to boost economic growth

- GBEMI FAMINU

Health and economic Experts have called for the need to improve healthcare financing in order to develop activities in the sector for the benefit of the country’s citizens and for economic growth in the long run.

Speaking at the PRE-NES26 webinar themed “Healthcare Financing in Nigeria: Realities, Impediment­s and Opportunit­ies” hosted by the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG) held recently, Olorunnimb­e Mamora, minister of state for Health, said the pandemic has brought to the fore the inefficien­cies in Nigeria’s health system and the barriers to universal health coverage which serves as a ticket that guarantees all citizens access to quality healthcare without financial hardship. He added that as a result, the sector requires reformatio­n which will fully utilize the opportunit­ies inherent in the country’s healthcare industry

“The current estimate of outof-pocket health expenditur­e is 77.5 percent and the funding gap for primary healthcare has been estimated at 84 percent. Healthcare financing in Nigeria has suffered a huge setback as a result of the CVID-19 pandemic which has almost crippled our economy, it is however important that primary healthcare is prioritize­d.” he said.

The minister also said that sustainabl­e investment in the healthcare sector is vital for national economic prosperity and growth, adding that nations that priorities its citizens’ health tends to be economical­ly productive and viable.

Yinka Sanni, chief executive officer (CEO), West Africa Standard Bank Group who doubles as a board member of the NESG, in his remarks, said the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic presented an opportunit­y for the country to deepen and rethink its approach to healthcare financing.

“In Nigeria, the perennial challenge of poor infrastruc­ture and shortage of Health workers due to decades of under-investment in healthcare has been exacerbate­d by the pandemic and its economic fallouts. It has brought to the fore the need to strengthen the country’s health system to build resilience against future occurrence­s and accelerate towards the attainment of the health-related SDGS” Sanni said.

Ben Akabueze director-general, Budget office of Nigeria, said Nigeria currently has the lowest public sector revenue to GDP ratio in the world, hovering around 8 percent which is about half of the African average.

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