Evaluating Nepal’s National Health Policy 2019: Strengths, Gaps, and Future Directions

Saroj Parajuli

School of Pharmacy, Karnali Academy of Health Sciences (KAHS), Jumla, Karnali Province, Nepal.

Nisha Adhikari

School of Pharmacy, Karnali Academy of Health Sciences (KAHS), Jumla, Karnali Province, Nepal.

Dirgha Raj Joshi *

School of Pharmacy, Karnali Academy of Health Sciences (KAHS), Jumla, Karnali Province, Nepal.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Nepal’s health policy landscape has shifted from a centralized, curative model to a more preventive, equitable, and decentralized system. Since the first National Health Policy in 1991, subsequent reforms in 1997, 2014, and 2019 have aimed to expand access, strengthen institutional capacity, and align the health sector with global commitments such as the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and Universal Health Coverage (UHC). The National Health Policy 2019 (NHP 2019) represents the most recent and comprehensive effort to advance Primary Health Care (PHC) within a federal governance structure and further reinforce these national and global priorities. This review critically examines NHP 2019 through document analysis of government policies, implementation reports, and peer-reviewed literature; comparative policy review against earlier national policies and regional standards; and evaluation using the WHO health system building blocks framework. NHP 2019 strengthens PHC by expanding health insurance, integrating federal-provincial-local roles, and promoting digital health and essential public health services. Implementation evidence shows progress in decentralization and community-level service delivery. However, major gaps persist, including inequitable financing, rural workforce shortages, weak health information systems, inadequate coordination across government tiers, and limited inclusion of marginalized groups and traditional health practices. NHP 2019 is conceptually strong but faces operational challenges. Its success depends on sustained financing, evidence-driven governance, improved intergovernmental coordination, and equitable workforce and resource allocation. Strengthening monitoring systems and integrating community and traditional health practices are critical for achieving the policy’s vision of healthier and more informed citizens and for guiding decision-makers in advancing PHC-oriented reforms.

Keywords: National health policy 2019, health system, universal health coverage, primary health care, public health policy, health governance


How to Cite

Parajuli, Saroj, Nisha Adhikari, and Dirgha Raj Joshi. 2025. “Evaluating Nepal’s National Health Policy 2019: Strengths, Gaps, and Future Directions”. International Journal of TROPICAL DISEASE & Health 46 (12):29-43. https://doi.org/10.9734/ijtdh/2025/v46i121705.

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