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When coverage fails at the point of care: why civil servants are pushing back on SHA

Christopher Magoba by Christopher Magoba
April 29, 2026
in News
Reading Time: 3 mins read

The goal of Kenya’s switch to the Social Health Authority (SHA) was simple: to make health care more accessible, less expensive, and closer to universal coverage. But lived experiences are starting to tell a different story, one that is full of confusion, gaps in coverage, and rising anger among government workers.

It often starts with a sense of urgency. A medical problem. A quick trip to the hospital. Then a simple but important question: Does this place accept SHA?

Yes, but only in some cases.

Where Policy Meets Reality

According to Union of Kenya Civil Servants Secretary-General Lawrence Nyaguti, over 100 cases of civil servants being detained in hospitals over unpaid bills have been reported in just a matter of days. These are not isolated incidents—they reflect a deeper structural issue within the system.

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The problem is not necessarily access, but clarity.

Facilities may accept SHA, but coverage varies significantly—sometimes limited to inpatient care, maternity services, or narrowly defined treatments. As a result, patients often discover gaps only after receiving care. By then, the bill is due.

Consequently, what was designed as financial protection becomes a source of financial shock.

The Shift from NHIF to SHA

Under the now-defunct National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF), civil servants operated under a more predictable framework. Their benefits included comprehensive inpatient and outpatient cover, along with structured allowances for dental, optical, and routine care.

In contrast, SHA introduced standardized contribution rules, including a 2.75% salary deduction. While this was intended to create equity across contributors, it has also flattened benefits—effectively placing civil servants into the same pool as the general public.

More critically, outpatient caps have emerged as a major point of contention.

At lower-tier facilities, limits can be as low as Sh 1,200. Higher-tier hospitals offer slightly more, but still below what many chronic conditions require monthly. Therefore, patients are forced into difficult choices: multiple hospital visits, partial treatment, or paying out-of-pocket.

The Burden of “Double Contribution”

For many civil servants, the anger goes beyond lower benefits. It feels like you’re getting less for your money.

In the past, medical allowances and employer-backed plans worked with NHIF coverage. Today’s SHA contributions have effectively taken over those allowances, but benefits have not grown in proportion.

Because of this, civil servants feel like they are giving twice: once through required deductions and again through direct payments for care.

This view is not only about money; it is also about the mind. When things become unpredictable, people lose faith in the system.

Chronic Illness and the Cost of Fragmentation

The impact is even more severe for patients managing long-term conditions.

Medication that once required a single monthly visit now demands multiple trips due to capped limits. In addition, logistical costs—transport, time, and lost productivity—compound the financial burden.

Healthcare, in this context, becomes fragmented rather than continuous.

And when continuity breaks, outcomes often follow.

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Christopher Magoba

Christopher Magoba

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