Duale Threatens Probe Into Civil Servants Over SHA Fraud After Releasing Ksh11.1 Billion
Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale has warned that civil servants implicated in fraudulent dealings with healthcare providers will face criminal prosecution, even as the government released KSh 11.1 billion to settle approved medical claims under the Social Health Insurance Fund (SHIF).
Addressing staff and management, the Cabinet Secretary underscored the central role of SHA in managing healthcare financing reforms and cautioned against any misuse of public funds.

“Fraud, collusion with rogue healthcare facilities and misuse of funds will not be tolerated,” Duale said. “Any officer found culpable will face the full force of the law.”
He emphasised that SHA sits at the financial core of Kenya’s new health system and urged incoming officers to uphold integrity, transparency, and accountability in handling contributions collected from millions of Kenyans.
SHA Chief Executive Officer Mercy Mwangangi confirmed that payments began on Friday, March 13, and would be processed in phases to ensure efficiency and accuracy.
“The disbursement of these funds has officially commenced today,” Mwangangi said in a notice to contracted facilities. “Payments are being processed in scheduled batches to allow for systematic transfers.”
Healthcare providers were advised to allow the full payment cycle—expected to run until Thursday, March 19—before submitting inquiries. SHA indicated that support teams would be available from March 20 to assist facilities that had not received payments for approved claims.
Despite operational challenges, including staff shortages in recent months, the authority reported significant progress in implementing the new insurance framework. According to SHA, it has collected approximately KSh 142.8 billion in contributions, transitioned about 29.8 million Kenyans to the scheme, and paid out KSh 109 billion to healthcare providers to cover medical services.
With the full complement of newly recruited staff now deployed across departments and counties, officials say service delivery is expected to improve substantially.

Duale challenged the new officers to prioritise revenue collection, ensure full employer compliance, strengthen claims management systems, and reduce administrative costs so that more funds reach frontline healthcare services.
“Your responsibility is to ensure that resources meant for healthcare benefit citizens directly, not administrative inefficiencies,” he told the recruits.
The meeting was hosted by SHA leadership, including CEO Mwangangi and board chairperson Abdi Mohamed.
The deployment of new officers comes at a sensitive time for the authority, which has faced scrutiny over delays in processing claims and concerns about the integrity of some contracted healthcare providers. Analysts say clearing pending payments may help restore confidence among hospitals and clinics that rely on timely reimbursements to sustain operations.

“Public trust in this system will only be sustained if every shilling is accounted for,” he said.
The government views SHIF as a cornerstone of its Universal Health Coverage agenda, aiming to provide affordable healthcare access to all citizens while reducing out-of-pocket medical expenses.
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Duale Threatens Probe Into Civil Servants Over SHA Fraud After Releasing Ksh11.1 Billion

