Mp Njeri Maina moves bill to end mandatory prepayments for emergencies

Kirinyaga Woman Representative Njeri Maina has moved the Health (Amendment) Bill in the National Assembly to guarantee emergency treatment without upfront payments. The proposal seeks to strengthen patient protections and impose penalties on facilities detaining deceased bodies over unpaid bills.

On February 11, 2026, Kirinyaga Woman Representative Njeri Maina moved the Health (Amendment) Bill for its second reading in the National Assembly, aiming to amend the Health Act. The bill guarantees access to emergency treatment before the payment of prescribed medical fees, obligating hospitals to provide urgent care without requesting upfront payments.

"The right to emergency treatment must be protected by this House. This expands the scope of emergency care to cover treatment at the scene, during transport and through to the hospital," Njeri said.

The changes address persistent challenges faced by patients and relatives unable to clear medical bills before admission and during treatment. According to the lawmaker, the legislation strengthens patient rights while promoting dignity and fairness in the country's healthcare system.

To enforce compliance, the bill introduces penalties, including a Ksh3 million fine for any public healthcare facility demanding prepayment before administering emergency treatment. It also makes it an offence for public healthcare facilities and providers in charge to detain bodies of deceased people as a means of demanding outstanding medical bills.

While speaking before the National Assembly, Njeri cited a notice by Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH) indicating that 262 unclaimed bodies were held at the facility over the past year, with an additional 124 reported in June 2025 alone.

"Hospitals and mortuaries continue to detain the bodies of Kenyans who have passed on and come from financially incapacitated families to ensure they drain them emotionally to pay the bill," the lawmaker reiterated.

According to Njeri, in one instance, a woman’s body was detained at Mathare Hospital for more than two months over a Ksh3.3 million bill, which her two college-aged sons could not afford to pay. Under the proposal, any public healthcare officer who approves or enables the detention of a body due to unpaid medical bills would face a fine of up to Ksh2 million.

مقالات ذات صلة

Nigerian officials and doctors shaking hands in a meeting room, symbolizing the government's pledge to release health workers' arrears amid a strike.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Nigeria's government pledges quick release of health workers' arrears

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

The Federal Government of Nigeria has committed to releasing N11.995 billion within 72 hours to settle outstanding arrears for doctors and other health workers amid a nationwide strike. This follows a high-level meeting with the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD), which began an indefinite strike on Saturday over unpaid salaries and welfare issues. The pledge includes payments for accoutrement allowances and builds on recent disbursements totaling over N40 billion.

أصدر حاكم مومباسا عبدالسوامد ناصر أمراً بإطلاق سراح أكثر من 100 امرأة محتجزة في قسم الولادة بمستشفى كوست جنرال تيتشينغ العام مع أطفالهن بسبب عدم القدرة على دفع فواتير الرعاية الطبية. لم تكن هؤلاء النساء مسجلات في تأمين الصحة SHA، وتبلغ فواتيرهن حوالي 100,000 شلن. يعالج التوجيه تحديات المستشفى بما في ذلك نقص الموارد والازدحام الخطر.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Following recent calls from dozens of health groups to phase out the controversial Medical Assistance to Indigent and Financially Incapacitated Patients (MAIFIP) program, Senate committees have endorsed a bill to make it a permanent part of the Universal Health Care (UHC) system—despite critics labeling it lawmakers' 'health pork.' Senate Bill No. 1593, consolidating four proposals, was approved at the committee level and awaits plenary debate.

Building on plans to extend zero-balance billing to select LGU hospitals, the Department of Health advocates redirecting additional MAIFIP funds directly to local units to bypass politicians' guarantee letters and speed up implementation amid 2026 budget debates.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi has dismissed fears that the National Health Insurance scheme could fall prey to state capture, following revelations of massive corruption at Tembisa Hospital. He argues that structural reforms in the NHI will prevent such abuses and that delaying universal healthcare would unfairly punish ordinary South Africans. Motsoaledi emphasized the need to recover lost funds while pushing forward with implementation.

مدير مستشفى في مقاطعة كاكاميغا وُجهت إليه تهمة الاحتيال على هيئة التأمين الصحي الاجتماعي (SHA) بمبلغ ٢.٥ مليون شلن كيني من خلال مطالبات طبية مزيفة. تكشف التحقيقات أنه قام بتلاعب وثائق صحية للحصول على الأموال. يبرز القضية تصعيد الحملة ضد الاحتيال في قطاع الرعاية الصحية في كينيا.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

دعت الهيئة الصحية الاجتماعية (SHA) مستشفيات ومنشآت طبية خارجية لتقديم علاجات متخصصة غير متوفرة في كينيا. صدر الإعلان في 31 ديسمبر 2025، مما يمنح المزودين 14 يومًا للتقديم. ويهدف إلى خدمة مستفيدي صندوق التأمين الصحي الاجتماعي (SHIF)، وصندوق الرعاية الصحية الأولية (PHC)، وصندوق الطوارئ والأمراض المزمنة والحرجة (ECCIF)، وصندوق نظام الرعاية الطبية للضباط العامين (POMSF).

 

 

 

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