KMPDU, civil servants threaten strike over medical cover dispute
Health & Science
By
David Njaaga
| Mar 04, 2025
Civil servants have threatened to stage a nationwide strike from Monday, March 18, if the government fails to resolve the ongoing medical cover dispute linked to the Public Officers Medical Fund (POMF).
The Kenya Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists and Dentists Union (KMPDU) and the Union of Kenya Civil Servants (UKCS) in a statement on Tuesday, March 3, accused the government of failing to pay hospital bills under the POMF scheme, leaving public servants stranded despite monthly deductions.
“The comprehensive medical cover was established in 2012 when civil servants forfeited their medical allowance for an insurance scheme,” said KMPDU Secretary-General Davji Atellah.
“Public servants are back to fundraising for medical needs despite being deducted twice—2.75 per cent to SHIF and forfeiture of medical allowance to POMF.”
The unions said various hospitals across the country had declined to offer services under POMF due to non-payment of bills.
READ MORE
China pledges to expand Kenya's SGR to Malaba
Private power producers, State agency in Sh4.2b tender dispute
Women volunteers rewrite history through digital knowledge campaigns
Regulator pushed to suspend marine insurance
Saccos unlikely to recover full losses in Kuscco scandal, regulator says
Community-led solutions are key to sustainable conservation outcomes
Software's role in driving digital transformation
Pyrethrum firm and Sacco tussle over Sh1.7 billion debt for 16 years
Sacco sues Sasra for 'shielding' Kuscco over Sh13b loss
How 5G-A and AI are driving double-digit growth in mobile subscriptions
The scheme, managed by the Social Health Authority (SHA), replaced the previous fee-for-service model with a public officers medical fund after the enactment of the SHA Act in 2023.
UKCS Secretary-General Tom Odege said, “We are giving the government two weeks to resolve this issue once and for all. Failure to do so, we will call on all civil servants in both national and county governments to join demonstrations starting on March 18.”
Odege added that the unions would escalate the protests into a full-blown strike within 30 days if the government failed to restore a functional comprehensive medical cover.
The unions said the move to deny public servants medical cover amounted to deliberate efforts to undermine workers' welfare.