Audio By Carbonatix
Chief Executive Officer of the National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA), Dr Aboagye Dacoasta, has announced that his outfit has concluded a policy agreement to help ease the financial burden on end-stage kidney patients.
According to him, the decision is currently awaiting approval from the board of the NHIA, which will see the scheme absorb part of the kidney treatment costs.
Speaking to JoyNews on May 14, he said “I think we have made progress on dialysis, so just last week a committee that has been set up to chair and implement the disbursement of the funds that were approved by Parliament has actually concluded their report including the dialysis patients themselves.
“So, we work with themselves, they have concluded there and I can confidently say that within the next few weeks we will be starting the disbursement to the various facilities,” he said.
He explained that following the increase in dialysis cost from GH¢380 to GH¢491, the new scheme will supplement the cost of treatment for the needy.
Dr Dacoasta explained that kidney patients at Korle Bu have been benefiting from philanthropists who cover about GH¢380 of their bill. Consequently, the new scheme would likely cover the remaining cost.
“We are looking at supplementing for both patients from Korle Bu, Komfo Anokye Teaching hospital in Central in such a way that for Korle Bu because they do get that support, we will be able to breach a gap for them and we support our patients also from Cape Coast and Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital
“The fact is they[kidney patients] do eight cycles per month, we cannot do all the eight so we are looking at an average or may be below average...Like I said the report is ready, it is just to be taken to the board for final consideration then implementation starts,” he added.
Speaking on JoyNews' the Pulse on May 14, President of the Renal Patients Association of Ghana, Kojo Baffour Ahenkorah lauded Dr Dacoasta for the initiative.
Touching on the cost covered by the philanthropist, he said that since the hospital reopened after its temporary closure, each renal patient paid the full cost for dialysis. Therefore, he was unclear about what the NHIA boss meant when he said that the cost was covered.
Latest Stories
-
Mexico beat South Africa in dramatic World Cup opener as three players sent off
38 minutes -
Gov’t releases GH¢537m to cover tuition fees of 159,750 students under No Fees Stress Policy
42 minutes -
Twice in a year, Chairman Wontumi’s lead lawyer has walked away
2 hours -
CSOs mount strong defence of OSP ahead of Supreme Court verdict
2 hours -
Telecel launches Ashanti Codes to equip youth with digital and AI skills
2 hours -
Cash for awards controversy: Minority demands parliamentary inquiry
2 hours -
Abronye DC granted permission to travel to UK for master’s programme
2 hours -
Government has stabilised economy, jobs will follow — Ricketts-Hagan
2 hours -
World Cup ticket allocations for Ghanaian diaspora not yet received -UN Mission
3 hours -
PURC, ECG and GRIDCo align plans to ensure stable power supply during 2026 FIFA World Cup
3 hours -
Ghana launches National Shea Commodity Platform to commercialise shea production
4 hours -
Bawumia holds talks with British High Commissioner in Accra
4 hours -
AFF study documents 115 edible forest species and indigenous knowledge in biodiversity hotspot
4 hours -
Fortune names Yellow Card among top global crypto innovators
4 hours -
MPs partner with Afarinick to boost Ghana’s cocoa production capacity
4 hours