The Chief Executive Officer of the Mental Health Authority, Dr. Eugene K. Dordoye, has announced that four major mental health conditions have been approved for coverage under the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS).
The conditions include Anxiety Disorders, Depressive Disorders, Bipolar Disorder, and Schizophrenia.
Speaking during a television interview on Friday, May 22, Dr. Dordoye explained that the policy has already received approval from the National Health Insurance Authority. However, full implementation is yet to begin due to ongoing technical and administrative adjustments within the healthcare system.
Dr. Dordoye described the move as a significant shift in Ghana’s approach to financing mental healthcare. He noted that mental health services have traditionally relied heavily on direct government funding rather than insurance-based support.
Integrating mental healthcare into the NHIS framework, he said, requires new billing structures and claims processing systems to enable healthcare facilities to properly submit and process mental health service claims.
He indicated that stakeholders across the sector are working to align healthcare institutions with the new operational requirements to ensure effective rollout. Although no official implementation date has been announced, the development is expected to ease the financial burden on patients and families who struggle to access long-term treatment.
Mental health advocates have long called for stronger integration of mental health services into Ghana’s mainstream healthcare financing structure, arguing that treatment costs often discourage individuals from seeking professional support.
The inclusion of these conditions under NHIS is expected to improve access to psychiatric care, medications, and long-term treatment, particularly for vulnerable individuals living with chronic mental health conditions.
This policy development comes amid growing national discussions on mental health awareness, increasing psychological pressures among young people, and calls for broader access to mental healthcare services across the country.
