google.com, pub-3998556743903564, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 ASHIA, Anambra State And Drugs Subsidy

ASHIA, Anambra State And Drugs Subsidy

By Polycarp Onwubiko

Anambra State health insurance agency (ASHIA) should please take a fresh look at the extant rule whereby a patient on treatment on subsidized drugs would not be entitled to another drug subsidy within a month. In public policy, rules inherent in the policy more often than not need feedback from the people affected by the policy ostensibly to satisfy the essence of the policy for the welfare of the people.

It does not make sense whereby ASHIA would refuse to approve additional drugs in the course of the treatment of the same ailment of the patience until one month elapsed for another approval for the same ailment. The implication of the ill-advised rule is that the patience while the drug he is taking has not cured the ailment and the medical doctor prescribes further drugs within the month, the patience has to purchase the prescribed drugs out of his pocket while his monthly salary is being deducted.

This apparently unreasonable if not irrational rule defeats the core mandate of the health policy whereby the subscribers have placed hope that his ailments would be taken care of by the health policy. Going by the statistics and probability, one can say that less than 50 percent of the subscribers go to hospital and need drugs subscription from ASHIA.

If this is doubted, let the agency at the end of the year publish the number of subscribers, the monthly deductions and the cost of drugs subscribed by the Agency. This is transparency and accountability in practice so that there will be a review of the rules guiding the disbursement of the deductions from the subscribers.

There is a case of an eye patience who had the eyedrop worth of N2,000.00 which ASHIA asked him to pay 10 percent of the amount while the Agency paid the remaining N1,800.00.

Then within the same month the eye problem has continued and the medical doctor prescribed another eyedrop costing N5,000.00 (five thousand Naira) but to the chagrin of the patience, ASHIA refused to pay for the eyedrop on the excuse that one month has not elapsed according to its rule.

In other words, the patience who can not afford N5,000 for the eyedrop can have his eye problem got worse or might go blind until one month when the almighty ASHIA will approve the payment minus 10 percent charge. This is not what president Olusegun Obasanjo had in my when he borrowed the healthcare delivery policy from South Africa.

The Anambra State Hon Commissioner for Health should review and abolish the gross irresponsible rules guiding ASHIA for the benefits of the poor masses who are dying because of inability to afford the ever escalating cost of drugs and medicaments. Government policies ought to be subject to review as a result of complaints and feedback. That is what is obtained in the civilized countries of the world.

One thing should be very clear in the lawful assignment of the agency, and that is the fact that the Agency is NOT meant for Revenue Generation for the State Government. It is simply to help the poor people in government's efforts in healthcare delivery. There is no reason why the drugs needed by patients even surgical operation and eye problem with eye glasses should not be paid by ASHIA. At the end of the year, if the fund collected is below the deductions and subscriptions by private people, the state government should reimburse the agency because healthcare delivery is at the core of government basic amenities and responsibility to the people especially the poor and vulnerable members of the society.

Government should strive to provide free medical services to the people and happily, Governor Soludo is doing his best in that regard but his eyes should be beamed at the transparency and accountability in the running of ASHIA.

 

Ray Ekpu's Critical Words On Marble Calling Tinubu To Be Conscious Of History

"I have said it before and I am ready to repeat it one million times that no Nigerian leader will be able to solve the problem of insecurity that we face today without state police.

"This country is too large for a single police system whose operational commander is based in Abuja. Under Buhari, 400 persons were identified as sponsors of terrorism. We ask president Tinubu to revisit the matter and get them to face the law.

"The (APC) Committee on Restructuring headed by Nasir El Rufai then Governor of Kaduna State came out with a Report that stated that people wanted State Police. Why should one man stop it by ignoring the decision of people who voted for him? What sort of democracy is that?

"That is what Buhari did. I hope that Tinubu does not walk along that path because of the figure of the killings and kidnappings in the last eight months of his administration which is alarming".------DAILY SUN, JANUARY 6  2024.

 

Polycarp Onwubiko, Media Commentator

 

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