The Federal Capital Territory Health Insurance Scheme (FHIS) is set to delist Health Maintenance Organisations (HMO) that are not meeting up on delivering quality healthcare services to enrollees.

Dr. Ahmed Danfulani, the Director of FHIS made this known in his address of welcome at the one-day interactive session with officials of HMO, FHIS, and the National Union of Local Government Employees(NULGE) on Tuesday in Abuja.

Danfulani said one of the ways to ensure that enrollees in the FHIS get quality healthcare service was to engage in an interactive session and get feedback on issues and challenges.

”The scheme has some challenges. Some healthcare providers do not give regular drugs to the enrollees.

“However, we are looking at alternatives to having private pharmacies near the healthcare facilities so that people can access those private pharmacies for drugs.

“There is another issue of delay in the transition code. With all the HMOs here, we are going to resolve the issues here.

“To those HMOs or healthcare providers who are not meeting up on delivery of quality service to our enrolees, you will be delisted or suspended from the scheme.

“Some of the challenges are not one-way traffic. The Area Councils are supposed to pay at the right time and volume to HIS so that we can also service the healthcare service providers to carry out the programs.

” Some councils are doing well in terms of payment but others are not and it is not encouraging,” he said.

Also speaking, the President of FCT NULGE, Mr. Zubiru-Abdullahi Kabir said there was a need to improve healthcare delivery under the FHIS.

“The healthcare facilities don’t attend to our members promptly. With this interactive session, I expect HMOs to do more and put in their best so that our members can get a better healthcare delivery system”.

Also speaking, the Care Coordinator of Zuma HMO, Dr. Arimoro-Yusuf Inuwa said HMOs work to ensure that enrollees get the service from the healthcare facilities.

Inuwa admitted that enrollees sometimes encounter challenges while trying to access healthcare in the facilities to no fault of theirs.

“However, some staff of healthcare facilities that prepare bills is incompetent and as such ineffectiveness leads to delay in payments and the enrolee suffers.

“There is a need for frequent sensitization of enrolees because most of them don’t know what they are expected to do at every level of the healthcare delivery system,” Inuwa said.

 
Back To Top

Want your friends to read this?

Hit the buttons below to share...