CS Duale makes historic appearance at KMPDU conference, vows reforms amid medics' trust deficit
KMPDU Secretary General Dr. Davji Atellah receives Health CS Aden Duale during the Annual Delegates Conference in Mombasa. PHOTO | COURTESY
Audio By Vocalize
In a historic first, Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale on Saturday attended the Kenya Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists and Dentists Union (KMPDU) Annual Delegates Conference in Mombasa — a move widely viewed as both symbolic and strategic, given the simmering tensions between government and healthcare workers.
“No Health CS has ever shown up here. Not once. Not until today,” KMPDU Secretary General Dr. Davji Atellah declared as he welcomed Duale to the conference, setting the tone for what became a surprisingly candid address.
Duale's presence alone marked a break from tradition, signaling a possible shift in how the government engages the medical fraternity.
With Universal Health Coverage (UHC) sitting atop Kenya’s
health agenda, the CS acknowledged what many in the room had long felt: without
a well-equipped, fairly treated, and respected workforce, UHC is just a slogan.
“There can be no UHC without doctors, nurses, and all
healthcare professionals being fully equipped, supported, and empowered to
serve,” Duale said.
The CS went further to assure delegates that the Ministry of
Health had honoured its 2024 Return to Work Formula commitments, including
payment of the first instalment of Ksh.1.75 billion — with the rest to follow
next financial year.
On postgraduate training, Duale confirmed that the State is
footing tuition bills for doctors in specialist programs, noting that Ksh.73.8
million has already been disbursed to the first batch of 54 doctors, with 39
more in the pipeline. He urged medics left out of the list to submit their
details for consideration, calling the effort inclusive.
But Duale didn’t sugar-coat the bitter pills. He admitted
that frontline medics still struggle to access quality care themselves — a grim
irony under the Social Health Authority (SHA).
“It is unconscionable that those who deliver care cannot
themselves access quality care,” he said, promising decisive engagement with
key agencies to fix the mess.
Duale also raised red flags about medics enabling fraud by
sharing pre-authorisation codes — a practice he warned could damage the
profession's credibility.
“We must care for our carers,” he said, adding that the
government would work with counties to expand internship slots and ensure
equitable deployment.
Just last week, he said, over 1,600 interns — medical,
dental, and pharmacy — balloted successfully for placements set for July 2025.
Medical Services Principal Secretary Dr. Ouma Oluga
emphasized dialogue as key to rebuilding trust, while Mombasa Governor Abdulswamad
Nassir proposed that statutory deductions be made directly at the source to
strengthen financial oversight.


Leave a Comment