Beyond the App: Why SSNIT’s Telehealth Initiative Misses the Mark on Pensioner Engagement
There is a pervasive, erroneous impression that those of us who consistently critique pension governance in Ghana see nothing good in the administration of our social security funds. Let this be stated clearly: critique is not cynicism. It is a rigorous demand for excellence, transparency, and accountability. When we critique the Social Security and National Insurance Trust (SSNIT), it is because we recognize a fundamental structural flaw. SSNIT is failing to engage its pensioners adequately, leaving a vast chasm between top-down administrative policies and the lived realities of the people who funded the trust.
A prime example of this disconnect is the recent rollout of SSNIT’s telehealth programme for pensioners. On paper, the initiative looks stellar --- a progressive, forward-thinking policy designed to bring healthcare to the doorsteps of the elderly. In reality, however, it stands as a classic case of administrative myopia that ignores the practical socio-economic and digital landscape of the Ghanaian retiree.
The Illusion of Universal Tech Adoption
To understand why this programme is structurally flawed, one must analyze the daily realities of the average Ghanaian pensioner against the backdrop of three distinct barriers:
- The Digital Literacy Gap: The programme operates on a flawed assumption of universal digital literacy. Not all pensioners are tech-savvy enough to navigate a complex mobile application, let alone own or comfortably operate a modern smartphone.
- The Prohibitive Cost of Connectivity: Data is a high-cost commodity. For a pensioner managing a fixed, often inflation-eroded monthly payout, choosing between purchasing data megabytes and buying basic nutritional or medical supplies is an unfair, systemic ultimatum.
- Infra-structural Deficits: Internet connectivity across Ghana remains notoriously unstable. In many rural and peri-urban areas, it is entirely non-existent. An app-based health service is structurally useless without a reliable network signal.
In public policy design, if a welfare or healthcare intervention cannot equitably cover its entire target demographic, its systemic value must be questioned. When access to a public benefit requires private financial expenditure (data) and advanced technical skills, the policy inherently discriminates against the most vulnerable.
Grounding the Critique in Theory and Best Practice
This mismatch between policy intent and consumer reality is a well-documented phenomenon. In academic and development literature, Everett Rogers’ Diffusion of Innovations Theory warns that socio-economic status and technological compatibility dictate how quickly a population adopts new technology. By failing to account for the unique tech-profile of elderly Ghanaians, SSNIT has designed a system destined for low adoption rates.
Furthermore, development experts champion the concept of Co-Production --- a governance framework emphasizing that public services are most effective when designed and delivered with the citizens who use them, rather than for them.
Had SSNIT looked at successful implementations across Africa and the developing world, they would have found templates for inclusive design:
- Mauritius’ Universal Welfare Model: Mauritius, often praised for having one of Africa's most robust social security systems, relies heavily on localized, face-to-face consultative committees with retirees before deploying health interventions. They prioritize physical accessibility alongside digital tools.
- India’s Ayushman Bharat Digital Health Mission: To bridge the exact gap Ghana faces, India’s public digital health initiatives utilize a network of grassroots, human-mediated kiosks (Common Service Centres). Recognizing that the elderly cannot all navigate apps, trained intermediaries handle the technology on behalf of the patient, free of charge.
- The "Zero-Rating" and Tech Subsidies in Latin America: In several mobile-health (mHealth) rollouts across Colombia and Peru, governments negotiated with telecom giants to "zero-rate" health apps --- meaning using the app consumes absolutely zero user data. Furthermore, targeted pilots provided simplified, large-button devices tailored to elderly ergonomics.
Had SSNIT practiced genuine co-production, their rollout would have looked radically different: featuring a localized pilot phase, partnerships for zero-rated data tariffs, and the provision of simplified, SSNIT-custom-made devices for those without smartphones.
My Thoughts: The Myth of the Passive Pensioner
The underlying issue here is an institutional culture that treats retirees as passive, silent bystanders. There seems to be an unspoken assumption that once a worker retires, they lose their agency. Let it be known clearly: pensioners are not all senile. There are thousands of retirees who are mentally sharp, highly professional, deeply experienced, and fully capable of articulating exactly what they need. We are not objects of administrative charity; we are the rightful owners of the Trust.
True engagement cannot happen behind the closed doors of corporate boardrooms or via polished, one-way corporate press releases. If SSNIT leadership is confident in its strategies and genuinely wishes to align with its primary stakeholders, it must step into the public square.
Let us go live on national radio and television. Let the leadership of SSNIT sit face-to-face with pensioners in an open, unscripted, interactive forum to answer the burning concerns of the people whose lifelong sweat built the national pension fund.
Until SSNIT shifts from a culture of imposing policies to one of genuine, active consultation, well-intentioned programmes like telehealth will continue to look like monuments of bureaucratic disconnect rather than genuine social support. It is time to talk with pensioners, not at them.
FUSEINI ABDULAI BRAIMAH
+233550558008 / +233208282575
afusb55@gmail.com
Ghanaian essayist and information provider whose writings weave research, history and lived experience into thought-provoking commentary.
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