Newscoven
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Analysis
    • Feature
    • Interviews
    • Politics
    • Science
    • World
    Makinde Has Built Institutional, Physical Structures For Long-Term Economic Growth Of Oyo State -Aduwo

    Makinde Has Built Institutional, Physical Structures For Long-Term Economic Growth Of Oyo State -Aduwo

    Soldiers Bar Makinde’s Delegation Bar From Seeing Released Victims At Military Hospital

    Soldiers Bar Makinde’s Delegation From Seeing Released Victims At Military Hospital

    Release Of Abducted Pupils, Teachers: Yilwatda Commends FG, Security Agencies

    Release Of Abducted Pupils, Teachers: Yilwatda Commends FG, Security Agencies

    Rescue Of Oriire Abductees: Olugbon Commends Tinubu, Makinde, Security Forces

    Rescue Of Oriire Abductees: Olugbon Commends Tinubu, Makinde, Security Forces

    SEE VIDEO: Makinde Confirms Release Of Abducted Oriire School Pupils, Teachers

    SEE VIDEO: Makinde Confirms Release Of Abducted Oriire School Pupils, Teachers

    Agbakoba: State Police Must Be Insulated From Executive Interference

    Agbakoba: State Police Must Be Insulated From Executive Interference

    When Project Elevate Took Advocacy Over Airport Barriers Against PWDs To FAAN

    When Project Elevate Took Advocacy Over Airport Barriers Against PWDs To FAAN

  • Entertainment
    EMHF Heritage Event Hall Open To Public

    EMHF Heritage Event Hall Opens To Public

    Historic Send-Forth For Professor YK Ajao As Iseyin Honours Its Musical Pride

    Historic Send-Forth For Professor YK Ajao As Iseyin Honours Its Musical Pride

    Olukoya Builds Heritage Event Hall In Memory Of Music Aficionado, Femi Esho

    Olukoya Builds Heritage Event Hall In Memory Of Music Aficionado, Femi Esho

    Sanusi, Atlético Berja Board, Berja Mayor, Seal Strategic Partnership

    Sanusi, Atlético Berja Board, Berja Mayor, Seal Strategic Partnership

    From Church Keys Too Global Stage, Pheelz Takes Over The Spotlight On CNN African Voices

    From Church Keys To Global Stage, Pheelz Takes Over The Spotlight On CNN African Voices

    Fela Lives: Tinubu On Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award

    Fela Lives: Tinubu On Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award

    Ilaji Assumes Ownership Of Interlink •Takes Over Atlético Berja

    Ilaji Assumes Ownership Of Interlink •Takes Over Atlético Berja

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • More
    • Advertisement
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
Sunday, July 12, 2026
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Analysis
    • Feature
    • Interviews
    • Politics
    • Science
    • World
    Makinde Has Built Institutional, Physical Structures For Long-Term Economic Growth Of Oyo State -Aduwo

    Makinde Has Built Institutional, Physical Structures For Long-Term Economic Growth Of Oyo State -Aduwo

    Soldiers Bar Makinde’s Delegation Bar From Seeing Released Victims At Military Hospital

    Soldiers Bar Makinde’s Delegation From Seeing Released Victims At Military Hospital

    Release Of Abducted Pupils, Teachers: Yilwatda Commends FG, Security Agencies

    Release Of Abducted Pupils, Teachers: Yilwatda Commends FG, Security Agencies

    Rescue Of Oriire Abductees: Olugbon Commends Tinubu, Makinde, Security Forces

    Rescue Of Oriire Abductees: Olugbon Commends Tinubu, Makinde, Security Forces

    SEE VIDEO: Makinde Confirms Release Of Abducted Oriire School Pupils, Teachers

    SEE VIDEO: Makinde Confirms Release Of Abducted Oriire School Pupils, Teachers

    Agbakoba: State Police Must Be Insulated From Executive Interference

    Agbakoba: State Police Must Be Insulated From Executive Interference

    When Project Elevate Took Advocacy Over Airport Barriers Against PWDs To FAAN

    When Project Elevate Took Advocacy Over Airport Barriers Against PWDs To FAAN

  • Entertainment
    EMHF Heritage Event Hall Open To Public

    EMHF Heritage Event Hall Opens To Public

    Historic Send-Forth For Professor YK Ajao As Iseyin Honours Its Musical Pride

    Historic Send-Forth For Professor YK Ajao As Iseyin Honours Its Musical Pride

    Olukoya Builds Heritage Event Hall In Memory Of Music Aficionado, Femi Esho

    Olukoya Builds Heritage Event Hall In Memory Of Music Aficionado, Femi Esho

    Sanusi, Atlético Berja Board, Berja Mayor, Seal Strategic Partnership

    Sanusi, Atlético Berja Board, Berja Mayor, Seal Strategic Partnership

    From Church Keys Too Global Stage, Pheelz Takes Over The Spotlight On CNN African Voices

    From Church Keys To Global Stage, Pheelz Takes Over The Spotlight On CNN African Voices

    Fela Lives: Tinubu On Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award

    Fela Lives: Tinubu On Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award

    Ilaji Assumes Ownership Of Interlink •Takes Over Atlético Berja

    Ilaji Assumes Ownership Of Interlink •Takes Over Atlético Berja

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • More
    • Advertisement
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
No Result
View All Result
Newscoven
No Result
View All Result
Home Health Health Law & Human Dignity

Your Card Is Valid, Your Clinic Is Empty

by Olatunde Sanu
July 12, 2026
in Health Law & Human Dignity
Reading Time: 6 mins read
0 0
A A
0
Your Card Is Valid, Your Clinic Is Empty
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on WhatsappShare on FacebookShare on Twitter

“The true measure of health insurance is not the card in a patient’s wallet, but the care waiting behind the clinic door. Nigeria has the laws. It has the policies. It has the institutions. It has the numbers. What it still lacks is the guarantee that the card in her hand means something real..”

Imagine Mrs. Halima Yusuf, a petty trader in Kano. She walked into her local Primary Healthcare Centre last month with her NHIA enrolment card. She had finally done what the government asked—registered for health insurance under the new mandatory scheme.

Her card was supposed to open the door to free maternal care, essential drugs, and emergency treatment. Instead, she was told that the clinic had no antimalarial in stock, that the midwife was on leave, and that the laboratory equipment had been broken for three months.

She left with her card in her hand and her dignity in tatters. “They counted me,” she said quietly. “But they did not care for me.”

RelatedPosts

The Algorithm, The Ambulance: Can Nigeria’s Gig Workers Get Health Coverage?

The Medicine In Your Hand: When Counterfeit Drugs Kill, Who Guards Dignity Of The Dying?

Your Health Data, Your Dignity: Why Nigeria’s Digital Health Revolution Must Not Leave Patient Privacy Behind

Valid Card, Empty Clinic

Nigeria has successfully distributed millions of health insurance cards. It has not yet succeeded in guaranteeing healthcare. Having a card is not the same as having care.

The Number Behind The Promise

Two days ago, the headline was striking: 22.03 million Nigerians are now enrolled in health insurance, representing 35 per cent year-on-year growth. The Director-General of the National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA), Dr. Kelechi Ohiri, revealed this at the Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the Nigerian Association of Insurance and Pension Editors in Lagos on 8 July, 2026.

But then he said something more important than all the numbers. “The decisive variable,” Dr. Ohiri declared, “is now implementation—consistent, rigorous and accountable execution that converts political commitment into healthcare access for real Nigerians.”

That single sentence contains the entire story. The question is not whether 22 million is a good number. The question is whether Mrs. Halima Yusuf can walk into a clinic and be treated with dignity.

The Law Behind The Number

The National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) Act, 2022, made health insurance mandatory for every person resident in Nigeria. Section 14(1) states: “Subject to the provisions of this Act, every person resident in Nigeria shall be required to obtain health insurance.” Section 14(2) explicitly includes “informal sector employees” among those residents.

This was a radical departure from the old National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) Act of 1999, which was voluntary and covered less than five per cent of the population—mostly federal civil servants and employees of large private firms. The NHIA Act recognised what the old scheme ignored: that the vast majority of Nigerians work outside formal employment—in markets, on farms, in workshops, and on digital platforms.

The Act also established the Vulnerable Group Fund, financed through the Basic Health Care Provision Fund, health insurance levies, special government allocations, and other sources, to subsidise coverage for those who cannot afford premiums.

And the Act rests on a constitutional foundation. Section 17 of the 1999 Constitution establishes, as a directive principle of state policy, that “the State shall direct its policy towards ensuring that there are adequate medical and health facilities for all persons.” Section 34 guarantees the right to the dignity of the human person—a right that is meaningless if a sick Nigerian must choose between treatment and starvation.

The Gap Between Card And Care

Dr. Ohiri’s announcement was not merely about enrolment numbers. He revealed that the NHIA has resolved 3,878 complaints, representing an 87 per cent resolution rate, with 95 per cent of cases concluded within prescribed timelines. More than ₦14.2 million has been refunded to enrollees. Non-compliant healthcare facilities have been sanctioned. The Authority has introduced service standards, including a one-hour target for commencing treatment for enrollees requiring urgent care.

These are welcome developments.

But they also tell us something troubling: if 3,878 complaints were lodged, how many more were never lodged because the patient simply went home? How many Mrs. Halima Yusufs walked away silently, their cards useless, their dignity bruised, too weary or too poor to navigate a complaints system they did not know existed?

The Dignity Question

Your health insurance card is not dignity. Dignity is the confidence that when illness comes, treatment will follow.

Dignity is the assurance that the card in your hand is not a piece of plastic, but a promise—a promise that the state will be there for you when your body fails you.

Dignity is knowing that the clinic you walk into has drugs, has a doctor, has electricity, and has a midwife who is not on leave.

Dignity is receiving treatment within the one-hour target, not watching the sun set on a bench until you are told to return tomorrow.

When a patient is told the clinic has no drugs, no equipment, and no staff, the card becomes a cruel joke. The state has counted you. It has recorded your name in a database. But it has not fulfilled its promise. And the dignity violation is profound.

The Vulnerable Group Fund

The Act established the Vulnerable Group Fund to cover those who cannot afford premiums—people with disabilities, children under five, pregnant women, internally displaced persons, refugees, victims of human trafficking, and other marginalised groups. The Fund is supposed to be the safety net beneath the safety net.

But in a country where budgetary releases are often delayed and counterpart funding from states is frequently not forthcoming, the Fund’s sustainability is far from assured.

A 2023 analysis by Nigeria Health Watch noted that although the NHIA Act makes health insurance mandatory, “uptake remains low and there is insufficient awareness about the programme, especially within the informal sector.” The informal sector, it noted, constituted over 65 per cent of Nigeria’s total employment at that time—a figure that has likely grown as formal job creation lags behind population growth.

The question is not whether the Fund is a good idea. It is whether the Fund is real—whether the money flows, whether the beneficiaries know they are covered, and whether the clinics they are sent to can actually treat them.

What Must Be Done

First, the NHIA must ensure that accreditation is tied to actual service readiness—not merely paperwork—and publish facility-level data on service quality, drug availability, and compliance rates. Only facilities capable of delivering the promised package should remain accredited. This would make the Authority accountable to the public and create competitive pressure for improvement—much as the Central Bank’s financial stability reports discipline the banking sector.

Second, the NHIA should publish an annual Patients’ Rights Report detailing complaints, sanctions, refunds, waiting times, and compliance rates. This would reinforce transparency and give civil society and the press the data needed to hold providers accountable.

Third, the complaints system must be accessible to the illiterate and the rural poor. A trader in Kano who cannot read English will not navigate an online portal. A farmer in Benue who has never used a smartphone will not lodge a digital complaint. Community health workers, ward development committees, and local language radio programmes must become the frontline of grievance redress.

Fourth, the Vulnerable Group Fund must be shielded from political interference and budgetary delay. The Act provides the legal framework. The implementation requires ring-fenced funding, independent auditing, and clear criteria for eligibility applied uniformly across states.

Fifth, we must resist the temptation to celebrate numbers while ignoring lived experience. The measure of success is not 22 million enrollees. It is whether Mrs. Halima Yusuf, the next time she walks into her PHC with her card, receives the care she was promised. It is whether the child with malaria gets treatment within the hour. It is whether the woman in labour finds a midwife waiting.

The Trust Question

Health insurance is sustained not only by legislation but by public confidence. Every failed encounter weakens that confidence. A patient who repeatedly encounters empty clinics, unavailable medicines, or unlawful charges stops believing in the system. And once trust disappears, enrolment eventually suffers.

If the government asks Nigerians to enrol, it owes them one thing: the guarantee that the card works. Not sometimes. Not when the clinic has stock. Every time.

A Final Thought

The true measure of health insurance is not the card in a patient’s wallet, but the care waiting behind the clinic door.

Nigeria has the laws. It has the policies. It has the institutions. It has the numbers. What it still lacks—what Mrs. Halima Yusuf still lacks—is the guarantee that the card in her hand means something real.

Dr. Ohiri was right. The decisive variable is implementation. Not the formulation of beautiful policies in Abuja, but the conversion of political commitment into healthcare access for real Nigerians—in Kano, in Benue, in every ward where a mother holds a card and hopes.

Health law is not just about statutes and enrolment figures. At its core, it is about protecting the dignity of the human person—especially at their most vulnerable.

Your health insurance card is your dignity. But only if the clinic behind the card is worthy of your trust.

Because the true measure of any health system is not the laws it enacts, but the dignity it protects.

•Sanu is a Nigerian lawyer and health law scholar. This column breaks down complex health laws for everyday Nigerians.

Tags: Access To CardsEmpty ClinicsMandatory Health InsuranceNational Health Insurances Authority (NHIA)
SendShareTweet

Related Posts

The Algorithm, The Ambulance: Can Nigeria’s Gig Workers Get Health Coverage?

The Algorithm, The Ambulance: Can Nigeria’s Gig Workers Get Health Coverage?

by Olatunde Sanu
July 5, 2026
0
17

"Platforms have treated gig workers as independent contractors, which means no pension, no sick leave, no workers' compensation, and no...

The Medicine In Your Hand: When Counterfeit Drugs Kill, Who Guards Dignity Of The Dying?

The Medicine In Your Hand: When Counterfeit Drugs Kill, Who Guards Dignity Of The Dying?

by Olatunde Sanu
June 28, 2026
0
26

"The counterfeit drug crisis is not merely a regulatory failure. It is a dignity crisis. When a sick Nigerian buys...

Your Health Data, Your Dignity: Why Nigeria's Digital Health Revolution Must Not Leave Patient Privacy Behind

Your Health Data, Your Dignity: Why Nigeria’s Digital Health Revolution Must Not Leave Patient Privacy Behind

by Olatunde Sanu
June 21, 2026
0
36

"As Nigeria digitizes its health sector, we must ensure that technology serves the patient, not the other way around. Your...

ICT | Science | Technology

Alleged Infringement: Tinubu Directs FCCPC To Investigate Big Techs

Alleged Infringement: Tinubu Directs FCCPC To Investigate Big Techs

July 7, 2026
15
NASENI, CCB Sign MoU On Assets Declaration, Operations

NASENI, CCB Sign MoU On Assets Declaration, Operations

June 25, 2026
7
Globacom Enhances “Borrow Me Credit” Service For Customer Satisfaction

Globacom Enhances “Borrow Me Credit” Service For Customer Satisfaction

June 24, 2026
16
Nigeria First Policy: NASENI, REA Sign MoU On Renewable Energy Deployment

Nigeria First Policy: NASENI, REA Sign MoU On Renewable Energy Deployment

June 20, 2026
11
Globacom Unlocks “More Data More Value” Offer For Customers

Globacom Unlocks “More Data More Value” Offer For Customers

June 6, 2026
33
Prev Next

Health

The Wounded Healer: When Protecting Patients Means Protecting The Carers

The Wounded Healer: When Protecting Patients Means Protecting The Carers

May 10, 2026
26

Resident Doctors May Call Off Strike

August 8, 2023
156

NCC Harnessing ICT To Revolutionise Health Sector -Maida

May 30, 2025
37

World Earth Day: Stakeholders Harp On Sustainable Waste Management

April 22, 2023
175

Ikudayisi Counsels Governments, Nigerians On Brain Drain, Regenerative Medicine

December 28, 2025
73

NAFDAC Alerts Nigerians On Fake Kiss Condoms

January 1, 2026
60
Prev Next
Newscoven

NewsCoven.com is an independent and unbiased online news medium determined to take a holistic approach to reportage of events, covering all spheres of human activities, with refreshed zeal and vigour.

Contact: +234-805-732-0978

Categories

  • Achievers | Appointments
  • Agriculture
  • Analysis
  • Arts | Book Review
  • Banking & Finance
  • Business
  • Church
  • Crime | Court | Judiciary | Security
  • Culture | Religion
  • Editorial | Discourse | Opinion
  • Education
  • Energy | Oil & Gas
  • Entertainment | Sports
  • Environment | Community | Eye Report | Metro
  • Feature
  • Health
  • Health Law & Human Dignity
  • Hotels | Travels | Tourism
  • ICT | Science | Technology
  • In The Eyes of the News
  • Interviews
  • Islam
  • Kaleidoscope With Anike
  • News
  • Peoples | Events
  • Politics
  • Reflections With Dapo Falade
  • Science
  • The Ethics Pulse
  • Uncategorized
  • VOXPOPULI
  • Woman's Essence by Motunrayo Busari
  • World

Recent News

Your Card Is Valid, Your Clinic Is Empty

Your Card Is Valid, Your Clinic Is Empty

July 12, 2026
Makinde Has Built Institutional, Physical Structures For Long-Term Economic Growth Of Oyo State -Aduwo

Makinde Has Built Institutional, Physical Structures For Long-Term Economic Growth Of Oyo State -Aduwo

July 12, 2026
Soldiers Bar Makinde’s Delegation Bar From Seeing Released Victims At Military Hospital

Soldiers Bar Makinde’s Delegation From Seeing Released Victims At Military Hospital

July 11, 2026

© 2024 NewsCoven - Beyond the Surface by DF Global Resources Enterprises.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • About Us
  • Advertisement
  • Breaking News | Latest Nigerian News Today
  • Checkout
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Home
  • Login/Register
  • My account
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

© 2024 NewsCoven - Beyond the Surface by DF Global Resources Enterprises.