By Hon. Dr James Nyikal, National Assembly Health Committee Chairperson; Dr. Margaret Lubaale, Executive Director of Health NGO Network (HENNET); Prof Anne-Beatrice Kihara, immediate former President of International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics
DEC 11 – For women in labour across Kenya, reaching a health facility, finding skilled health workers, and affording care can be a matter of life and death. These challenges are not rare, but daily realities for many families.
Every year on 12 December, the world observes Universal Health Coverage Day, a chance to renew the promise of health for all. But for this promise to be meaningful, it must reach every woman and child, everywhere in Kenya.
Slow Progress in Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health
While Kenya has made gradual gains in maternal, newborn and child health with improved vaccination and increased antenatal care, progress in maternal survival has been painfully slow.
Between 2014 and 2019, the maternal mortality rate dropped by less than two percent, even as investment increased. United Nations data shows that Kenya’s maternal mortality ratio remains one of the highest in East Africa, exceeding those of Ethiopia, Uganda, and Tanzania.
Newborn and child deaths have also declined slightly and are severely constrained by inequities. For example, children born to mothers with only primary education face far higher mortality than those whose mothers have secondary education and beyond.
Persistent inequalities continue to deny children a healthy start in life.
The Urgency of the Maternal, Newborn and Child Health Bill
Kenya’s MNCH services have suffered from fragmented policies, inconsistent county financing, and short-term funding. Devolution has blurred responsibilities between national and county governments, leading to gaps in planning, poor reporting, and weak accountability.
The Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (MNCH) Bill, 2023, proposed by Sen. Beatrice Akinyi Ogolla, presents a vital opportunity to change this trajectory.
The MNCH Bill seeks to establish a clear legal framework guaranteeing the right to maternal, newborn, and child health services. It obliges both national and county governments to respect, protect, and fulfil these rights through enforceable mechanisms.
At its core, the Bill affirms that every woman and child in Kenya, regardless of location or economic status, deserves timely, affordable, respectful, and high-quality care.
It embeds service delivery in the principles of universal access, equity, dignity, availability of essential services, and continuous quality improvement.
How the MNCH Bill Delivers on the Promise of UHC.
- Guarantees the right to the highest attainable health for all mothers and children.
- Ensures access to the full continuum of care, including before pregnancy and through childhood
- Protects marginalised and hard-to-reach communities, such as people living with disabilities or those unable to pay for health services
- Guarantees respectful, dignified and non-discriminatory care, irrespective of identity, such as age, marital status or social background
- Strengthens health financing at the county level through mandated country budget allocation for MNCH
- Improves service availability through infrastructure and supplies such as ambulances, essential medicine and skilled health workers.
- Institutionalizes accountability and reporting, with both the Cabinet Secretary and County Executives mandated to submit annual reports to Parliament and County Assemblies on services, financing, and gaps
- Strengthens monitoring, data, and quality assurance through mandated continuous monitoring, maternal and child death surveillance, with enforcement of quality standards.
The MNCH Bill is more than a piece of legislation; it is a lifeline and a turning point for millions of Kenyan families.
By making essential services enforceable rights, strengthening accountability, and securing sustainable domestic financing, the Bill lays the foundation for people-centred Universal Health Coverage.
Political Will and National Commitment
Political leadership is aligning behind reforms for women and children. President Ruto’s involvement with the Global Leaders Network for Women’s, Children’s and Adolescents’ Health and his directive for real-time reporting of maternal and child deaths signal a strong executive commitment.
Cabinet Secretary Hon. Aden Duale’s focus on realizing the Social Health Authority and robust county leadership further demonstrates that Kenya is mobilizing on all fronts.
With government officials, communities, civil society, and health workers rallying together, Kenya stands ready to turn these commitments into action.
Call to Action
As the MNCH Bill reaches its final committee stages, now is a critical moment for public involvement. Citizens are encouraged to contact their Members of Parliament to express support for the Bill.
Advocates, experts, donors, and community members must unite and implement strategies to accelerate the reduction of maternal, newborn, and child mortality.
The passage of the MNCH Bill will show that “health for all” is no longer just a slogan, but a binding national pledge.




























