The Nigerian Government has disbursed over N192 billion to strengthen primary healthcare facilities across the country since the launch of the Basic Health Care Provision Fund (BHCPF) in 2019.
The Executive Secretary of the National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA), Dr. Muyi Aina, disclosed this during the recent National Health Financing Policy Dialogue, where stakeholders gathered to assess progress and challenges in healthcare financing in Nigeria.
Dr. Aina emphasized that the BHCPF has played a critical role in improving access to basic health services, particularly in underserved and rural communities, aligning with the government’s goal of achieving Universal Health Coverage.
The dialogue, with the theme, “Reimagining the Future of Health Financing in Nigeria” was organised by the National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) and partners.
It sought to reimagine financing models that make healthcare more equitable, sustainable, and accessible for all Nigerians.
Dr Aina said that currency fluctuations and rising service costs continued to strain Nigeria’s health system, even as budget allocations are increasing at both federal and state levels.
He said that ‘out-of-pocket expenditure still accounted for a disproportionate share of healthcare spending, with the public sector’s contribution at just 14 per cent.”
According to him, the government has mobilised N3.5 billion, 60 per cent of which is pooled from mechanisms such as the BHCPF, Global Fund, Gavi, and PEPFAR.
He said that the fund was mobilised through the Sector-Wide Approach (SWAp) and the Health Sector Renewal Investment Initiative.
Aina said that 8,309 facilities nationwide now received quarterly funds under the BHCPF.
“Allocations were recently scaled up from an average of N300,000 to between N600,000 and N800,000 per quarter, depending on facility size and patient volume.
“The reform, dubbed BHCPF 2.0, is designed to address real operational costs at the facility level, supporting human resources, essential commodities and infrastructure.
“Even though budget allocations are growing, the cost of healthcare delivery, vaccines, TB medicines, malaria commodities, and operational programmes is rising even faster,” he said.
He expressed government’s commitment to closing existing financing gaps through stronger co-financing at the federal, state and local government levels, coupled with performance-based accountability measures.
He said that the Niherian Government was set to roll out a direct funding mechanism across the country to improve accountability in healthcare spending.
“The model, already piloted in four to five states, allows payments for commodities and health worker salaries to be made directly into designated accounts, making the process transparent and traceable.
“These are the sorts of things we are trying to do to ensure that funds reach their targets without leakages,” he stressed.
The NPHCDA boss also said that government’s analysis showed that between 15 per cent and 25 per cent of non-campaign vaccines in Nigeria cannot be accounted for.
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He said that the losses could stem from wastage, inaccurate population estimates, procurement inefficiencies or weaknesses in vaccine management systems.
Dr Aina said that further state-level analysis was underway to close the accountability gap.
He explained that the Nigerian Government was investigating discrepancies in vaccine utilisation across several sub-national units, with some reportedly consuming up to four times more vaccines than their recorded coverage rates.
Dr Aina said that “while border states may vaccinate non-Nigerian citizens, the scale of discrepancies points to deeper issues of accountability, wastage or faulty forecasting.”
“We are now telling states to go down to the local government level, identify where the problems are and fix them,” he added.
He said that through efficiency measures, the government had reduced projected vaccine procurement costs for the next five years from 1.5 billion dollars to one billion dollars, ensuring smarter spending of limited resources.
NAN

