KCCB demands payment of Ksh.2B NHIF claims owed to Catholic hospitals
As services in
public hospitals grind to a halt, the options for patients continue to narrow
down, as failure by the government to pay Catholic-sponsored mission hospitals
is paralysing operations in the facilities that would have provided a reprieve
for those who cannot afford private hospitals.
The Kenya
Conference of Catholic Bishops (KCCB) says pending National Health Insurance
Funds (NHIF) claims amounting to Ksh.2 billion have severely hampered
operations across their facilities.
"Faith based
hospitals are owed huge amounts by NHIF, amounting to over Ksh.2 billion. The
effect is that most of our hospitals are crippled, and not able to operate
optimally,” KCCB Vice Chair, Bishop Anthony Muheria, said in a press addres on
Thursday.
“And therefore we
demand the government to promptly pay NHIF debts owed to all facilities that
have provided medical services under NHIF before the transition.”
The clergy also
called for an urgent solution to the ongoing healthcare crisis occasioned by
the striking medics, saying it is causing untold suffering on helpless Kenyans.
They also
cautioned the medics against using the lives of patients as a bargaining chip
in their struggle against their employers.
"The life of
a human person should never be used as a bargaining currency. Every life is
worth more than any financial or employment gain. We urge the government on one
hand and medics on the other to seek a working arrangement that does not put
the lives of Kenyans at risk, so lives are not at risk during the industrial
action," said Muheria.
The Catholic
bishops also decried the high cost of living made worse by increased taxation,
noting that a majority of Kenyans are barely making ends meet.
"On several
occasions we have addressed the issue of over taxation and the cost of living.
The reality of ordinary Kenyans s that they are struggling financially,” added
Muheria.
“We have urged and
continue to encourage the govt to improve public participation in assessing its
tax regime. We should not intend to raise billions in a short span at the cost
of great stress to Kenyans."
They similarly
criticised the government’s apparent disregard for the voice of the church in
matters affecting the society, terming religion a vital player in the well
being of any society.
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