The National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF) is Kenya's primary social health insurance programme, covering millions of Kenyans with inpatient medical benefits. Established post-independence, NHIF has faced persistent challenges: inadequate funding, poor service quality, and limited coverage of outpatient care.
Overview
NHIF was created as a parastatal to provide healthcare access to Kenyan workers and their families. It collects premiums from employees and employers and reimburses healthcare providers.
Key Points
- Parastatal model inherited from Post-Independence Economic Policy
- Covers roughly 10-15 million Kenyans (about 30% of population)
- Chronic underfunding relative to Healthcare Demand Kenya
- Challenges integrating with Private Healthcare Kenya
Outlook
NHIF reform is central to Kenya's Universal Health Coverage goals. Digital systems and payment improvements are underway.
See Also
- Healthcare System Kenya
- Social Security Kenya
- NSSF Kenya
- Parastatal Reform Kenya
- Medical Insurance Kenya
- Public Healthcare Kenya
- Vision 2030
Sources
-
Government of Kenya. "Sector Reports and Statistics." https://www.go.ke/
-
World Bank Kenya Studies. https://www.worldbank.org/
-
African Development Bank Research. https://www.afdb.org/
-
GSMA Intelligence. "Kenya Sector Analysis." https://www.gsmaintelligence.com/
-
Central Bank of Kenya. "Annual Reports." https://www.centralbank.go.ke/