Home Lifestyle Health FG releases N32.9bn to strengthen primary healthcare nationwide

FG releases N32.9bn to strengthen primary healthcare nationwide

t The Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Dr. Ali Pate
t The Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Dr. Ali Pate

The Federal Government has approved and released N32.9 billion through the Basic Health Care Provision Fund (BHCPF) to enhance primary healthcare delivery across Nigeria. This marks the third round of disbursements in 2025.

The Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Prof. Muhammad Pate, made the announcement in a statement titled “The Red Letter,” encouraging citizens to ensure transparency and accountability in the use of the funds.

“Today, the government of the Federal Republic of Nigeria has approved and released N32.9bn through the Basic Health Care Provision Fund, the third round this year.

“This money is not sitting in Abuja. It has already begun its journey into the commercial bank accounts of primary health care facilities in every ward across Nigeria.

“It is your clinic’s money. It is your community’s chance. It is your country’s promise,” Pate said.

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According to the minister, the funds are designed to support Nigeria’s healthcare system by strengthening primary health centres, expanding access to basic health services, and providing resources for emergency care.

He noted that each facility has the authority to plan and spend the funds in collaboration with members of the community it serves.

“The health committee in your ward, your traditional leaders, your women’s and youth groups, your faith-based organisations—all of you are meant to sit together, decide together, and spend together on what will make your facility stronger, safer, and more ready to serve.

“This fund is the heartbeat of Nigeria’s renewed hope in health—a signal that government is not only fulfilling its responsibility as the custodian of the fund, but trusting you to help safeguard that spending.

“But too often, we have observed that communities stand aside. Our community members and institutions do not ask how the money is used, or if it reaches the people it was meant for. When that happens, silence becomes a loss,” he emphasised.

Prof. Pate described “The Red Letter” as a renewed call for citizen participation in local health governance. He urged Nigerians to engage with health committees, monitor spending, demand transparency, and ensure that funds are used to improve health outcomes.

“Each naira in this N32.9bn is a seed. When you nurture it with vigilance and pride, it grows into medicine, safe births, better infrastructure, and lives saved. When you neglect it, it withers into waste.

“Let this Red Letter reach every community, every ward, and every home. Let it remind us that the health of Nigeria lies in the hands of Nigerians.

“Together, we plan. Together, we spend. Together, we protect life,” the minister stated.

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