A new round of advisers is being sent to Kenya on behalf of the
Obama administration, which plans to deploy individual private contractors to
assist in the simultaneous expansion of health-care services and the ongoing
decentralization of the national government.
Indeed, one of Obama’s long-term goals “is to
establish a social health insurance system to enable equitable provision of
health care to all Kenyan citizens,” one of the adviser-recruitment documents
explicitly declares.
Specific to the delivery of health care and
related services such as family planning, the U.S. Agency for International
Development, or USAID, is recruiting a senior health-systems strengthening
adviser to help manage “a complex $260 million program, the largest in
sub-Saharan Africa and seventh largest in the world,” according to a contractor
solicitation.
Working out of USAID’s Office of Population and
Health in Nairobi, the selected candidate will advise USAID/Kenya on all
aspects of family planning, maternal and child health, nutrition, tuberculosis,
malaria and HIV/AIDS.
USAID’s Kenya-wide
integrated package of health services is
“designed to strengthen local capacity” to eventually offer the services independently.
The agency noted that among
government-administered sectors affected by government decentralization,
“Health is one of the most devolved sectors and USAID is deeply involved in
supporting the government of Kenya to implement the new structure.”
The adviser will be tasked with finding
solutions to obstacles Kenyans face in receiving health care, particularly
“public sector maternity and primary health care services,” which became free
for Kenyans in June 2013.
Additional challenges to “maintaining quality
services during this transition period” include “shortages and inequitable
distribution of health workers,” the majority of whom are located in urban
areas.
Similarly, despite USAID’s goal to strengthen
Kenyan capacity to provide health care, the country faces major financial
impediments to efficiently allocating health resources. Not only has the
percentage of Kenyan-government health expenditures declined, but 34.5 percent
of Kenya’s total health expenditures remain dependent on international donor
support, USAID acknowledged.
“An estimated 30 percent of people now receiving
care in public facilities could afford to use private services if they had
insurance,” it continues. “Shifting them would allow the government to focus
public sector resources on the poorest and most vulnerable citizens.”
To devise solutions to the challenges, the
senior health systems strengthening adviser will work with various USAID/Africa
and USAID/Kenya interagency health teams “with considerable interaction with
USAID/Washington,” the agency says.
Government ‘devolution’
Another new USAID contractor position is a
senior devolution adviser, or SDA, who will focus on implementing a $125
million portfolio of existing U.S.-funded programs. The SDA specifically will
assist in the transfer of concentrated political power from Nairobi to the county
governmental level, as ordered by Kenya’s relatively new constitution.
This five-year
devolution effort is but one facet of the administration’s proposed FY 2015,
$553 million foreign-assistance budget for Kenya, considered a key U.S. ally in
combating terrorism and promoting stability in the region. While the funding
level is consistent with previous fiscal years during Obama’s second term,
dollar-wise it is significantly less than the nearly $800 million in annual aid
to Kenya in
his first term.
USAID earlier this year set a mid-February deadline in considering
potential SDA candidates, who must have previous experience providing oversight
of similar government-decentralization initiatives, preferably in Africa.
The selected candidate will seek to ensure the
devolution programs are conceptually sound, regularly monitored and analyzed,
and effectively managed, according to a Personal Services Contractor notice
that WND discovered via routine database research.
Accomplishing these
goals is a monumental task, considering that five distinct USAID offices are
pursuing the endeavor “in collaboration with Department of State colleagues,”
who in turn must align U.S. efforts “with the work of international donor
partners,” the
notice says.
Complicating matters is
the administration’s acknowledgement of the risk in facilitating the devolution
process. Although it may successfully decentralize national Kenyan power, it
also could inadvertently create 47 equally corrupt county systems, as
WND reported in 2013.
The agency at the time pointed out that that
successful decentralization can create a “more responsive, open and pluralistic
government,” while simultaneously running the risk of “systemic failure that
further exacerbates the problems that it was intended to alleviate – often
leading to a frustrated populace and a re-centralization of power.”
Contracting giants Development Alternatives
Inc., or DAI, and Chemonics International currently are implementing Kenyan
programs for the administration, which on multiple occasions has handed out
no-bid contracts and contract extensions.
In some of those instances, USAID awarded contracts with the
specific goal of alleviating the financial burden on Kenyan taxpayers when
their government failed to assume control of programs, despite existing
agreements between the two nations enabling the Kenyan people to assume greater
control over such programs.
In one such instance, rather than returning $224
million in Kenyan program funds to U.S. taxpayers when the price of generic
drugs plummeted, USAID awarded a 15-month contract extension to Chemonics to
complete a project for which the Kenyans purportedly were ill-equipped to
assume control.
USAID similarly awarded a no-bid contract to DAI
– by changing contractual language – when it appeared that Kenyan county
governments would be forced to foot the bill for an incomplete segment of a
devolution-related program.
Indeed, the agency in that contract modification
simply assigned new responsibilities to DAI that otherwise would have been
transferred to Kenyan officials in the Financial Inclusion for Rural
Microenterprises, or FIRM, project.
Rather than go through
with the transfer, U.S. taxpayers shelled out an additional $3 million in
technical assistance for which the individual counties “would be forced to
incur without the extension,” the
agency said.
The approach follows a pattern of heightened
U.S. involvement in Kenyan affairs that WND began exposing in 2012, when
USAID’s self-described exponential growth in its Kenyan aid portfolio was
discovered.
Follow-up coverage likewise exposed a USAID
scheme to methodically sway global media to report favorably on agency
activities.
A WND
investigation additionally discovered a cover-up of the activity. Days after the report, the government
eliminated all trace of the propaganda-plan documents from a publicly
accessible database.
See all the reports about spending in Kenya:
- Obama spending helps economy – in Kenya!
- Obama bails out Big Pharma – in Kenya
- Obama funding urinals in Kenya … again
- Obama now probes everyone’s health – in Kenya!
- Obama moves to protect taxpayers … in Kenya
- Obama studying spending more … in Kenya
- Obama finally fixing health care … in Kenya
- Obama funds Kenya project during shutdown
- Obama can’t stop spending — in Kenya!
- Obama drops hundreds of millions on (Kenyan) farmers
- Obama repackages Kenyan aid scheme
- Obama pushes $50 million more for Kenya
- Obama expands reading program – in Kenya!
- Obama pushing Kenyan ‘peace’ projects
- New Obama projects to boost Kenya power companies
- COVER-UP! Contracting system sanitized of Kenya documents
- White House rolls out Kenya propaganda plan
- Obama’s spending grows ‘exponentially’ – in Kenya!
http://www.wnd.com/2015/02/u-s-advisers-chasing-health-care-for-all-in-kenya/
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