A promise of the national health insurance scheme: Building human capital
Photo: Courtesy
In Uganda today, falling sick is not just a health risk; it is a financial gamble. In a country where many citizens survive on barely 1 dollar a day, one hospital visit can wipe out savings and force families into debt, compounding existing economic hardship. Each year, the World Bank estimates that nearly one million Ugandans, about 233,328 households, are pushed into poverty due to out-of-pocket spending on health care. For too many families, illness brings not only pain but also catastrophic financial strain.
We know this reality too well. We have seen parents sell property to pay hospital bills and children miss school because fees were redirected to medical emergencies. We have witnessed hardworking men and women lose productive days, incomes, and dignity because healthcare is still largely financed out-of-pocket. This is unsustainable for families and for our economy.
Uganda is home to more than 45 million people, a young and vibrant population that should be our greatest economic asset. But a demographic dividend can quickly become a demographic burden if we fail to protect the health of our people. Productivity begins with well-being. Healthy citizens work more days, earn more income, and contribute more meaningfully to national development. When illness goes untreated or drains household income, the entire economy suffers.
Uganda’s health financing system has placed the heaviest burden on those least able to carry it. In recent years, out-of-pocket expenses have accounted for over one-quarter of total health expenditure. Meanwhile, patients face long waiting times, limited specialized personnel, inadequate equipment, and frequent stock-outs and expiries of essential medicines in public facilities.
Against this backdrop, the National Budget 2026/27 offers hope. The government’s allocation toward the National Health Insurance Scheme signals a powerful shift from health as an individual burden to health as a shared national responsibility, advancing universal health coverage for essential services.
This is why the promise of the National Health Insurance Scheme matters.
The promise is simple yet transformative. Instead of families paying alone in moments of crisis, we pool risk together. Instead of illness pushing households into poverty, we protect them before disaster strikes. Instead of treating healthcare as a last-minute expense, we recognize it as a strategic investment in human capital.
Today, health insurance coverage in Uganda remains extremely low, just 1.1 percent of the population, or 467,797 people as of 2024. This represents a significant decline from 4.1 percent in 2021. Health insurance is not merely a social program; it is sound economic policy and a safeguard against catastrophic health expenditure. It stabilizes household incomes, protects savings, enhances labour productivity, and strengthens resilience. In the long run, it fuels economic growth.
When we invest in health, we invest in stronger families, a more productive workforce, and a more competitive Uganda.
The allocation in FY 2026/27 is therefore more than a budget line; it is a statement of intent. It affirms that no Ugandan should have to choose between treatment and tuition, between medicine and meals. But a promise is only as strong as its implementation. The success of the National Health Insurance Scheme will depend on transparency, adequate funding, strong governance, and a health system prepared to meet increased demand. It will require collective commitment from government, employers, workers, and citizens alike.
Let us make this promise real, not only in policy but in practice, not only in allocation but in access, not only in words but in the lived experience of every Ugandan. Let this promise mean that when illness strikes, no Ugandan faces both sickness and financial ruin.


