INTERVENTIONS

Steps taken by Ministry to make cancer treatment affordable

Cancer is leading cause of death after infectious, cardiovascular diseases

In Summary
  • The CS said 42,000 cases are diagnosed in the country annually and 27,000 deaths recorded.
  • Nakhumicha said governors in 10 counties where regional cancer centres have been established have provided required human resource to operationalise them.
Health CS Susan Nakhumicha Wafula and Embu Governor Cecily Mbarire take part in the awareness walk during the official launch of the cervical cancer awareness month in Embu county on January 27, 2023
Health CS Susan Nakhumicha Wafula and Embu Governor Cecily Mbarire take part in the awareness walk during the official launch of the cervical cancer awareness month in Embu county on January 27, 2023
Image: MoH

The Ministry of Health has outlined nine actions to make cancer treatment accessible and affordable in the country.

In her submissions to the Senate Health Committee, Cabinet Secretary Susan Nakhumicha noted that cancer is the leading cause of death in the country after infectious and cardiovascular diseases with 42,000 cases and 27,000 deaths annually.

“Although the criteria for national disaster declaration may be based on the magnitude of the problem, public safety or health concerns and financial implications, the current prevalence is within the regional and global range,” she explained.

Nonetheless, Nakhumicha outlined nine steps the government has taken to address the cancer burden.

They include:

1. Budgetary allocation in 2023/24 financial year for establishment of Kisii Cancer Centre (Sh50 million with donor funding of Sh1.8 billion), regional cancer centres (Sh155 million) and National Cancer Institute (Sh200 million).

2. Launch of the third National Cancer Control Strategic Plan 2023-2027 to guide health sector response

3. Capacity build of 563 community health promoters on screening, awareness and referrals in 14 counties

4. Revision of NHIF Oncology Package to comprehensively cover cancer care and treatment

5. Decentralisation of cancer care and treatment to reduce costs

6. Conditional grant for a monthly supply of 23 basic/essential free cancer medicines at public cancer centres

7. Provision of certain medicines such as Glivec for free for those with NHOF cards

8. Establishment of a national cancer reference laboratory to scale up diagnosis

9. Public-Private Partnerships for provision of cancer services at subsidised prices

   Nakhumicha further noted governors in 10 counties where regional cancer centres have been established have provided the required human resource to operationalise them.

The 10 counties are Meru, Embu, Nyeri, Nakuru, Mombasa, Garissa, Kisumu, Kakamega, Bomet and Machakos.

The CS said her ministry is further collaborating with implementing partners at the county level building on cancer screening and early diagnosis.


WATCH: The latest videos from the Star