Josephine Christopher, DAR ES SALAAM Tanzania
An estimated 585,672 senior citizens, equivalent to 27.65 percent of the total adults above 60 years of age in Tanzania mainland, are unable to afford healthcare, Community Development, Gender, Women and Special Groups Minister Dorothy Gwajima has revealed.
Gwajima told the National Assembly on Thursday that by the end of June
2023, there were 2.2 million adult Tanzanians over the age of 60 years in the
mainland, with males accounting for 1.3 million and females 735,169.
The
Minister said that there were still a substantial number of elderly who were
unable to pay for medicine prescribed to them because they did not have enough
money.
Gwajima
was responding to a question from Newala-Rural Member of Parliament Maimuna
Mtanda, who wanted to know the government's strategy to ensure that the elderly
over 60 years of age who are eligible to receive free health services do get
those services.
"The
government has provided identification cards through the improved community
health fund (iCHF), the government continues to process to identify the elderly
who are unable to afford healthcare at all councils in the country so that they
can get medical services paid for by the government," the minister said.
The
World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that the number of people aged 60
years and older will increase from 1 billion in 2019 to 1.4 billion by 2030 and
2.1 billion by 2050.
The
UN agency has said that there is a projected increase in demand for primary
health care and long-term care, urging countries to reinvent health care
provisions for the elderly.
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