Reforms for financial protection schemes towards universal health coverage, Senegal/Reformes du regime de protection financiere afin d'offrir une couverture maladie universelle au Senegal/Reformas de los sistemas de proteccion financiera con miras a la cobertura sanitaria universal, Senegal

Advancing the public health insurance system is one of the key strategies of the Senegalese government for achieving universal health coverage. In 2013, the government launched a universal health financial protection programme, la CouvertureMaladie Universelle. One of the programme's aims was t...

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Published inBulletin of the World Health Organization Vol. 98; no. 2
Main Authors Daff, Bocar Mamadou, Diouf, Serigne, Diop, Elhadji Sala Madior, Mano, Yukichi, Nakamura, Ryota, Sy, Mouhamed Mahi, Tobe, Makoto, Togawa, Shotaro, Ngom, Mor
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published World Health Organization 01.02.2020
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Summary:Advancing the public health insurance system is one of the key strategies of the Senegalese government for achieving universal health coverage. In 2013, the government launched a universal health financial protection programme, la CouvertureMaladie Universelle. One of the programme's aims was to establish a community-based health insurance scheme for the people in the informal sector, who were largely uninsured before 2013. The scheme provides coverage through non- profit community-based organizations and by the end of 2016, 676 organizations had been established across the country. However, the organizations are facing challenges, such as low enrolment rates and low portability of the benefit package. To address the challenges and to improve the governance and operations of the community-based health insurance scheme, the government has since 2018 planned and partly implemented two major reforms. The first reform involves a series of institutional reorganizations to raise the risk pool. These reorganizations consist of transferring the risk pooling and part of the insurance management from the individual organizations to the departmental unions, and transferring the operation and financial responsibility of the free health-care initiatives for vulnerable population to the community-based scheme. The second reform is the introduction of an integrated management information system for efficient and effective data management and operations of the scheme. Here we discuss the current progress and plans for future development of the community-based health insurance scheme, as well as discussing the challenges the government should address in striving towards universal health coverage in the country.
ISSN:0042-9686
1564-0604
DOI:10.2471/BLT.19.239665