Universal Health Coverage in Kenya: The Financing, Governance, and Institutional Dynamics of a Decentralized Policy Environment
by Nalulasi Masika Edwin
Published: February 14, 2026 • DOI: 10.47772/IJRISS.2026.10100507
Abstract
The research focuses on the mechanisms, challenges, and consequences that UHC reform in Kenya has, conceptualizing UHC as a long-term government policy project that cuts across the governance, financing, and state capacity nexus. Based on theoretical frameworks of policy learning, incrementalism, and institutional capacity, the article evaluates the effects of Kenya's devolved system of health and strategic purchasing mechanism on UHC implementation and equity outcomes. Using qualitative policy analysis of government reports and academic publications, the research unveils structural constraints of the social health insurance program over time, the presence of inequalities in the delivery of services, and constraints of governance that mitigate the effects of reforms. These results bring into focus the necessity to strengthen the institutional capacity, strategic purchasing, and intergovernmental mobilization to achieve equitable and sustainable UHC. The article is a policy theory contribution to intricate social reforms through the way in which iterative policy learning and governance structure frame reform paths in a lower- and middle-income setting.