Tag: SAGAs

  • MoH engages stakeholders to advance Kenya Healthcare Referral Policy

    MoH engages stakeholders to advance Kenya Healthcare Referral Policy

    The Ministry of Health has intensified efforts to strengthen patient care and health system coordination through the development of the Kenya Healthcare Referral Policy, a key reform aimed at ensuring patients receive timely, appropriate, and quality care across all levels of the health system.

    As part of the ongoing process, the Ministry on Thursday convened a stakeholder engagement forum in Nairobi, bringing together representatives from national and county governments, healthcare professionals, regulatory bodies, professional associations, SAGAs, and development partners to contribute to the policy framework.

    A well-functioning referral system is critical in ensuring patients access care at the right level and are seamlessly referred when specialised services are required.

    Strengthening this system will help reduce waiting times, improve emergency response, enhance continuity of care, and optimise the use of health resources. Kenya continues to experience increasing demand for specialised services, coupled with a high number of self-referrals to higher-level hospitals.

    This has led to congestion, delays, and inefficiencies, with many patients bypassing primary care facilities where services could be accessed closer to home.

    The proposed Kenya Healthcare Referral Policy seeks to address these challenges by establishing clear referral pathways, strengthening communication between facilities, and enhancing accountability across the system.

    Key priorities include standardising referral procedures, ensuring timely patient transfers, improving feedback between referring and receiving providers, and reducing congestion in specialised hospitals.

    The policy is currently undergoing stakeholder consultations and technical review, with validation expected in the coming months ahead of finalisation and adoption.

    Once implemented, the policy will strengthen patient-centred care by creating clear pathways across the health system, enabling faster and more coordinated referrals, and reinforcing healthcare delivery at the county level.

    This aligns with Kenya’s broader health sector reforms, including the advancement of Primary Health Care and Universal Health Coverage under the Social Health Insurance Act, 2023.

  • CS Duale calls for accountability as health SAGAs sign 2025/26 Performance Contracts

    CS Duale calls for accountability as health SAGAs sign 2025/26 Performance Contracts

    The Ministry of Health has reaffirmed the governance and accountability framework guiding Semi-Autonomous Government Agencies (SAGAs) following the signing of Performance Contracts for the Financial Year 2025/2026 at the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI) headquarters in Nairobi.

    Speaking during the ceremony, Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale stated that all SAGAs operate under the authority and policy direction of the Ministry, noting that any legislative proposal relating to these agencies must be channelled through the Ministry in strict conformity with established legal and policy frameworks.

    He underscored that it is unconstitutional for any agency to function outside this structure or to encroach on the mandate of another SAGA, emphasising that each institution must remain within its legally defined scope to preserve order, reinforce accountability, and ensure coherence across the health sector.

    The CS observed that the performance contracting process is a key instrument for aligning institutional mandates with national health priorities and strengthening results-based management across the Ministry and its agencies.

    The afternoon session mirrored an earlier engagement with Principal Secretaries, reflecting a unified leadership approach anchored on accountability, policy alignment, and a shared commitment to delivering measurable outcomes for Kenyans.

    Addressing agency heads and regulators, Duale emphasised the importance of teamwork, discipline, ethical leadership, and prudent management of public resources, particularly in the face of fiscal constraints and ongoing sector demands.

    He reiterated that health remains a cornerstone of national development and urged institutional leaders to uphold the public trust placed in them.

    Duale further stressed that the signed performance contracts must translate into tangible improvements in service delivery, including reduced patient waiting times, reliable access to essential medicines, well-equipped health facilities, strengthened community health systems, and improved overall health outcomes.

    The ceremony was attended by Principal Secretaries Dr Ouma Oluga (Medical Services), Mary Muthoni (Public Health and Professional Standards), and Ahmed Ibrahim (National Government Coordination), alongside senior Ministry officials.