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Objective: The objective of this study is to estimate spending on NCD prevention in Kenya and identify theenablers, challenges and dynamics underpinning population-level NCD prevention spending, with particular focuson tobacco use, harmful use of alcohol, unhealthy diets and physical inactivity.Methods: Primary and secondary data collection was used to examine processes and organizational contexts thatshape the formulation of policy and financial frameworks for NCD prevention. The methodology was categorizedinto three tiers; an academic literature review, scrutiny and analysis of official policy documents and budgetary dataon health and NCDs, and in-depth stakeholder interviews with key government officials leading NCD programmes.Government and government-routed donor spending on population level prevention was gauged to estimate NCDprevention spending. Where possible, impact of prevention programmes on disease incidence and risk factors wasgauged through available outcome indicators.Results: Kenya spent an estimated 2.31 billion KSh on NCD prevention in 2015-16, constituting around 1.7% of totalgovernment health spending for the year. It is among the first African countries in the WHO African region to beginre-orienting its health system to address NCDs. Enablers include regional cooperation, local and global civil societyadvocacy, building integrated NCD programmes, progress in alcohol and tobacco taxation and regulation andinstitutions for inter-sectoral coordination. Challenges include devolution and subnational capacity gaps,perception of low political salience and visibility of NCD prevention interventions, poverty-related non-behaviouralrisk factors and regulatory gaps in nutrition policy. Opportunities identified including earmarking of revenues,county-level investment in health promotion, food systems approach to nutrition, ensuring timely disbursement tofacilities, and interagency mechanisms between national and county governments.Conclusion: Kenya has made considerable progress in reorienting its health system towards NCD prevention andhas also increased financing for NCD prevention in recent years, but it still remains less than 2% of governmenthealth spending. Increased population-level NCD prevention spending can help address the growing NCD burdenand produce economic benefits.Keywords: Noncommunicable Diseases, Tobacco, Behaviour, Employees, Incidence, World Health Organization,Risk Factors, Diet, Nutrition Policy, Tobacco, Perception, Taxes, Poverty
Published in: Journal of the Pakistan Medical Association
Volume 75, Issue 12 (December) (Supple-04), pp. S132-S152