Monday, July 13, 2026

Universal health coverage key economic strategy for Nigeria: Minister

Mr Pate stated that UHC is a strategic imperative embedded within Nigeria’s broader economic development aspirations.

• December 12, 2025
Health minister Muhammed Ali Pate
Health minister Muhammed Ali Pate [credit : Rickett global hygiene ]

The federal government says achieving universal health coverage (UHC) is not only a health priority but also an economic strategy that can improve productivity and drive inclusive national development.

The Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Muhammad Pate, made the statement on Friday in Abuja at a media conference commemorating the 2025 UHC Day.

Marked globally on December 12, the 2025 theme is: “Unaffordable health costs? We’re sick of it!”

Mr Pate stated that UHC is a strategic imperative embedded within Nigeria’s broader economic development aspirations.

He said political prioritisation of health was evident in President Bola Tinubu’s commitment to improving outcomes.

“It is a national economic strategy. Health is key to human capital, to children learning well, to teachers teaching, to the military defending the country, and to trade and investment thriving.

“Resources allocated to health have increased over the last three years,” he said.

Mr Pate said the 2025 UHC Day theme reflected the daily struggles faced by millions worldwide, noting that many Nigerians were pushed into poverty due to illness and high healthcare costs.

He emphasised the president’s stance that no Nigerian should have to choose between healthcare and their family’s well-being.

“The government’s vision is clear: families should not have to choose between paying for healthcare and buying food for their children,” he said.

Mr Pate highlighted decisive steps under the Nigeria Health Sector Renewal Investment Initiative (NHSRII) to ensure Nigerians no longer face the painful choice between healthcare and survival needs.

He described NHSRII as a shift to “one plan, one budget, one conversation,” noting rising government investment, improved state-level leadership, direct facility financing, and a quadrupling of primary healthcare utilisation over three years.

Mr Pate also cited major advances in local manufacturing, including the groundbreaking of West Africa’s largest dual-active ingredient mosquito net factory in Edo State.

“By 2026, nets will be produced here in Nigeria, proving local production is now a reality,” he said.

He added that citizens’ confidence in the health system was increasing, with surveys showing improved trust in government handling of health emergencies and ongoing reforms, although affordability remained a pressing challenge.

“We are not anywhere near declaring victory, but we are changing the trajectory, which for many years had remained stagnant,” Mr Pate said.

Pavel Ursu, WHO representative to Nigeria, said that globally, families still faced the impossible choice of seeking healthcare or meeting basic needs, describing the burden as “very heavy.”

Mr Ursu acknowledged positive signals in Nigeria, including expanding service coverage and improving financial protection, but warned that “financial protection remains our most stubborn challenge.”

He commended Nigeria for championing the 2025 World Health Assembly resolution on global health financing, calling the country’s reforms “remarkable,” and urged increased investment, particularly in prepaid domestic resources to reduce out-of-pocket payments.

Oluwatosin Kolade, UNFPA sexual and reproductive health specialist, said Nigerians deserved a system where “every woman, man, and child had access to quality health services without financial hardship.”

“When we invest in health, we invest in a prosperous future,” Mr Kolade added, urging accelerated efforts to end unmet family planning needs, preventable maternal deaths, and gender-based violence.

(NAN)

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