Back to Homepage
Health

FG Raises Health Insurance Enrollment To 20m, Targets 44m By 2030

Aglow News
October 26, 2025
FG Raises Health Insurance Enrollment To 20m, Targets 44m By 2030

FG Raises Health Insurance Enrollment To 20m, Targets 44m By 2030

Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Muhammad Pate noted that the development reflects President Bola Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda and the country’s steady progress toward universal health coverage.

The Federal Government has raised healthcare insurance enrollment to cover about 20 million Nigerians, and is working to reach 44 million citizens by 2030.

Article image

Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Muhammad Pate, disclosed this in a post on X (formerly Twitter) on Saturday, noting that the development reflects President Bola Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda and the country’s steady progress toward universal health coverage.

While providing an update on Nigeria’s progress in expanding access to quality and affordable health insurance, he said in 2024, Nigeria broke its enrollment record with more than 2.4m new people insured, bringing total coverage to about 20m Nigerians.

He noted that the new healthcare policy is the surest path to reducing out-of-pocket expenditure, which still represents about 70% of total health spending.

Social health insurance schemes now account for 90% of all enrollments nationwide, he added.

“A major constraint in care quality has been the low capitation fee for enrollees. For years, the capitation stood at ₦750 per person. We have doubled it to ₦1,450 to ensure providers are properly equipped to deliver consistent, high-quality care. Fee-for-service rates have also been increased by 380%, based on actuarial evidence aligning cost-reflective rates with quality requirements.

Article image

“The Federal Government has also introduced the One Hour Referral Authorization Code, issued by the insuring entity to the provider to confirm referral approval. By shortening this process to 1 hour, we are eliminating unnecessary delays and ensuring that patients move quickly from primary to specialist care”, the statement read in part.

He explained that to strengthen accountability, he has directed the National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) to commence covert mystery shopping to monitor providers and ensure that enrollees are not denied treatment.

“Undercover monitors are already observing processes in facilities nationwide to ensure that insured Nigerians receive timely and dignified care.

“The evidence is clear. From fewer than 10m hospital visits in all of 2023, more than 46m visits were recorded by the second quarter of 2025.

Article image

“Out-of-pocket payments remain the dominant source of health care expenditure for most of our people, translating into higher costs and lower standards of accountability for providers.

“ When the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare signed the Renewed Hope Ministerial Performance Monitoring Bond with its detailed key performance indicators, we set ambitious 2030 targets that are now within reach, one of which is national health insurance coverage.

“Under the leadership of Mr President, all macroeconomic reform and cross-sectoral policy direction are driven by one objective: ensuring that every Nigerian can actualize their aspirations while accessing affordable, quality care.

“This people-centred approach defines the comprehensive reforms now reshaping our health sector. As we modernise infrastructure across primary, secondary, and tertiary facilities in all local government areas, our record-breaking progress in national health insurance enrollment is aligning demand with Nigeria’s rapidly expanding supply of human resources and infrastructure.”

Article image

He revealed that nearly 120,000 health workers have been trained since 2023, and 2,500 doctors, nurses, midwives, and community health extension workers have been recruited to strengthen frontline services.

Over the past 16 months, 4,000 health personnel have also been added in Federal Tertiary Hospitals to close workforce gaps.

“Reforms in the Basic Health Care Provision Fund and the NHIA are delivering measurable gains in patient confidence and service utilisation.

“As enrollment expands, benefits multiply. Wider adoption of health insurance enhances quality, strengthens accountability, and protects households from financial hardship.”

These achievements, he noted, reflect President Tinubu’s vision of a health system that serves all Nigerians, regardless of income or status.

Article image

He assured that FG would continue to modernise infrastructure, strengthen the workforce, and sustain reforms until every Nigerian is covered and cared for.

Tags

Health

Related Posts

Health: Japan Fertility Rate Falls Again To Record Low

Health: Japan Fertility Rate Falls Again To Record Low

Japan’s fertility rate declined to a record low of 1.14 in 2025, marking the tenth consecutive year of decline and highlighting the country’s worsening demographic challenges. With births falling to just over 670,000—the lowest level since records began in 1899—officials face growing concerns over an ageing population, labour shortages, rising social security costs, and a shrinking workforce despite ongoing efforts to encourage marriage and childbearing.

Health: WHO Chief Visits Epicentre Of Ebola Outbreak In DR Congo

Health: WHO Chief Visits Epicentre Of Ebola Outbreak In DR Congo

World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has visited Bunia in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, the epicentre of a rapidly escalating Ebola outbreak that has recorded over 1,000 suspected cases and hundreds of deaths. Health authorities warn the outbreak is spreading across multiple provinces and into neighbouring Uganda, raising concerns over limited healthcare capacity, ongoing regional conflict, and the risk of wider transmission in displacement camps and vulnerable communities.

Health: US Allocates Extra $80mn To Tackle Ebola

Health: US Allocates Extra $80mn To Tackle Ebola

The United States has approved an additional $80 million to support efforts to contain the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda, bringing total US assistance to $112 million since the outbreak began. The funding will provide protective equipment for health workers, border screening support, and testing kits as authorities intensify efforts to prevent further international spread of the disease. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo has recorded 10 confirmed and 223 suspected deaths since it was declared on May 15, with over 1,000 confirmed and suspected cases reported so far.

Share this article