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AFC Promises Free Primary Care, Mental Health Reform, and Smart Health System in 5 Years

Admin by Admin
August 20, 2025
in News
L-R AFC Presidential Candidate Nigel Hughes and Prime Ministerial Candidate Laura George

L-R AFC Presidential Candidate Nigel Hughes and Prime Ministerial Candidate Laura George

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By Mark DaCosta-The Alliance For Change (AFC) has unveiled a comprehensive health blueprint promising free primary services, an ambitious mental-health overhaul, major workforce expansion, nationwide electronic records and climate-resilient facilities — all within a five‑year timetable. The plan sets out a rights-based, digitally enabled system intended to deliver prevention, treatment, rehabilitation and dignified end‑of‑life care to every person in our country, including hinterland and Indigenous communities.

The AFC’s policy document outlines an expansive reimagining of health services that puts community clinics and schools at the centre of care, elevates mental health into a fully funded government programme, and commits to rapid recruitment and training to tackle staff shortages. Complementary measures range from free dialysis and subsidised medicines to telemedicine for remote villages, solar‑ready hospitals and hospice provision. While the proposals speak to urgent needs long familiar to Guyanese, the scale and speed of the promised changes raise immediate questions about funding, logistics and regulatory safeguards.

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Under the plan, primary care would be available at no charge at every local health post and centre, with proactive screening drives aimed at young people and public sector workers. Immunisation outreach to remote communities, health education woven into school curricula and community‑based efforts to curb non‑communicable diseases are all foregrounded. Mental health receives particular emphasis: the AFC envisages a national institute to train practitioners and run applied research, a corps of mental‑health workers embedded in regional hospitals, health centres and educational institutions, 24/7 crisis support lines, and an anti‑stigma education campaign across all levels of schooling.

On the workforce front the party pledges immediate hiring of 1,000 nurses, doctors and allied personnel, incentives to attract Guyanese professionals abroad and from Commonwealth jurisdictions, and improved compensation and living support for staff posted to hardship areas. New training capacity is promised through nursing and dental schools targeted at underserved regions, and even a high‑school pre‑nursing pathway to funnel students into the health professions.

Access to treatment is addressed through an assertive list of entitlements: dialysis services without means‑testing, subsidised essential pharmaceuticals and laboratory tests, and a national essential medicines framework paired with a strengthened, decentralised supply chain to combat stockouts and wastage. The document also pledges to digitise health records nationwide within three years, deploy artificial intelligence for diagnostics and planning, expand telemedicine to hinterland locations and build a central health data repository to guide policy.

Community wellness initiatives focus on prevention of hypertension, diabetes, cancer and obesity through local exercise and nutrition programmes, vouchers for maternal and child nutrition, and support for affordable, locally produced healthy foods. Infrastructure commitments seek to ensure new health buildings are energy‑efficient and disaster‑resilient, upgrades such as solar power and rainwater harvesting for existing facilities, and pilot “green” health zones in each region. Palliative care is incorporated as standard across regional hospitals, with home‑based support systems and at least three hospice units to be created within five years.

A calendar of milestones sketches deliverables: a mental‑health programme and a free dialysis order in the first 100 days; the mental‑health institute, the start of national electronic medical records and the hiring push in year one; construction of dental schools and beginning of “smart” facility conversions in year two; an active mental‑health corps and hospice services by year three; and full electronic records coverage, certification of universal primary care and publication of a Health System Resilience Index by year five. The AFC also envisages funding lines for civil society projects, expanded public–private partnerships, community health committees and citizen audits of health budgets.

Taken together, the proposals aim to recast health as a public good available to every citizen, but the plan leaves key operational questions unanswered. How will recurrent costs — particularly for unlimited dialysis and subsidised medicines — be financed sustainably? What legal and technical safeguards will govern a national health data repository and the use of AI for diagnoses? Can the health workforce be scaled up so rapidly without compromising training quality or prompting inflationary wage pressures elsewhere? And how will rollout be sequenced to reach isolated riverine and hinterland populations while ensuring accountability at regional levels?

For voters in our nation, the AFC’s document represents both an aspirational agenda and a test of political credibility. The next steps should include detailed legislative proposals, oversight mechanisms and clear benchmarks for equity in service delivery. If backed by transparent financing and robust implementation plans, the platform could address longstanding gaps; without them, it risks becoming a catalogue of promises that outpace the state’s capacity to deliver.

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