Cabinet approves bill targeting unlicensed clinics, rogue medics
President William Ruto chairs a Cabinet meeting at State House, Nairobi, on July 29, 2025. PHOTO | PCS
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The Cabinet has approved the Quality Healthcare and Patient
Safety Bill, 2025, a sweeping legislative proposal aimed at reforming the
health sector by eliminating systemic corruption, unqualified facilities, and
regulatory failure.
The endorsement was made during a Cabinet meeting chaired by
President William Ruto at State House, Nairobi, on Tuesday.
In the session, which focused on critical policy matters across
health, infrastructure, energy, and youth empowerment, the Executive arm
described the Bill as a response to “entrenched impunity and malpractices” that
have long compromised healthcare delivery and undermined public trust.
The Bill proposes the establishment of a unified quality
assurance framework and a powerful oversight agency dubbed the Quality
Healthcare and Patient Safety Authority.
According to the Cabinet, the proposed authority will “enforce
national care standards, oversee implementation, and monitor performance,
where all health facilities, laboratories, and ambulance services will be
subject to strict mandatory licensing, registration, and accreditation.”
“The Bill seeks to eliminate systemic fraud, regulatory
loopholes, and conflicts of interest that have long undermined healthcare
delivery and public trust. It responds to glaring gaps that have allowed
unqualified and fraudulent health facilities to be licensed and to operate,” read
the Cabinet despatch.
“This lack of clear standards, coupled with weak oversight and
collusion among facilities, regulators, and practitioners, has left patients
vulnerable and eroded accountability.”
The Cabinet noted that many of the health sector’s failures
were often facilitated through collusion among regulators, facilities, and
practitioners.
Among its provisions, the Bill introduces quality improvement
plans at the facility level, enforces patient rights, and sets clear standards
for emergency medical services.
The new Bill is also expected to “tackle the root causes of
health sector corruption, protect patients, and deliver safe, effective, and
high-standard healthcare”, aligned with the government’s universal health
coverage goals.
The proposed legislation now moves to Parliament for debate
and potential enactment.


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