Audio By Carbonatix
The National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) is reviewing its medicines list and tariffs to reflect the present economic situation of the country.
According to the Chief Executive Officer of NHIA, Dr Dacosta Aboagye, this is among measures adopted to deal with the challenge of illegal payments, popularly known as ‘copayments’, charged to clients of the insurance scheme.
Speaking to JoyNews, he said the NHIA paid an average of GH₵180 million monthly as claims to help facilities in March 2024.

The scheme made this payment to ensure servicing its debt stays within the 90-day window for the payment of vetted debt.
However, reports of illegal charges at some health facilities persist despite improvements in payment made to the health facilities.
On the back of this, Dr Aboagye stated that the appropriate sanctions will be applied following the rollout of incentives including the review of the tariffs.

“In fact, it is actually not right that after the NHIA over the last year has made a commitment to pay the lower level tier up to December and the upper tier up to October, facilities are still charging our members, this is not right.
“We are currently reviewing our tariffs to make sure that it commensurate with the increasing prices. Once we do that, no facilities will have the moral right to charge any of our members in the benefit package that we have provided. Any provider who will go contrary to the agreed principles will be sanctioned,” he added.

Dr Da-costa Aboagye stressed that the requisite systems would be instituted to adjust tariffs to reflect economic changes automatically.
“I want to put an end to the ‘copayment’ or illegal charges at the health provider sites that are making the scheme unpopular. The Medicines list and tariff are currently being reviewed to reflect the economic and epidemiological trends. I intend to put systems in place for the automatic adjustment of the tariff to reflect any economic changes”, he said.
The NHIA is also embarking on a long-term cost-saving agenda with the procurement of Ghana Cards for 6.3 million users aged six to 14 year-old.

The target age group will be issued the national identification card instead of the NHIA printing cards.
“We want to collaborate with the National Identification Authority (NIA) to issue Ghanacard for persons [aged] 6 to 14 years. This card would be integrated with the NHIS member details so the merged or linked Ghanacard is used to access health care. This would save the nation, the cost of printing NHIS as well as Ghanacard”, he emphasised.
Meanwhile, a new office has been constructed at Kumawu to serve the needs of subscribers in the catchment and help improve service delivery.
Latest Stories
-
Why Dr Matthew Opoku Prempeh is the best bet for Ghana: The unstoppable case for NAPO as running mate
9 minutes -
Academic City’s Waakye packaging project wins global packaging award
20 minutes -
Africa’s future workforce, customers are already here and they are young – Nii Armah Quaye
24 minutes -
Telecel Turns Up University of Ghana with Black Sherif, KiDi & Kweku Smoke on Val’s Day
27 minutes -
When culture trends: How Mahama’s fugu revival can boost local sales
28 minutes -
The Ghanaian talent shift: Key insights employers can’t ignore from the Jobberman 2026 Jobs Market Report
31 minutes -
More than 30 killed in blast at Pakistan mosque, officials say
36 minutes -
Investing in youth is Africa’s most strategic business decision – Nii Armah Quaye
37 minutes -
We had sex in a Chinese hotel, then found we had been broadcast to thousands
37 minutes -
Nigerian court orders UK to pay £420m over 1949 killing of miners
37 minutes -
Ministry of Finance relocates offices to Kanda
39 minutes -
Amazon shares fall as it joins Big Tech AI spending spree
39 minutes -
TikTok told to change ‘addictive design’ by EU or face massive fines
41 minutes -
Fisherman fleeing elephants killed by crocodile in Zambia
41 minutes -
JoyNews’ Emefa Atiamoah-Eli wins REMAPSEN’s Best Journalist in Health Reporting award for West and Central Africa
54 minutes
