Tufton announces $1-b Health Infrastructure Maintenance Fund

As Jamaica pushes forward with a nationwide program to upgrade and expand public hospitals and community health centers, national officials have unveiled a landmark $1-billion initiative to address longstanding gaps in the upkeep of critical medical equipment and facility systems. Health and Wellness Minister Dr. Christopher Tufton made the formal announcement of the new Health Infrastructure Maintenance Fund (HIMF) Tuesday, during his address to the 2026-27 Sectoral Debate held in Jamaica’s House of Representatives.

Tufton emphasized that the fund is designed to correct a repeated past mistake that has undermined Jamaica’s public health system: investing billions in new construction and upgrades while failing to allocate sufficient resources for ongoing maintenance. He framed the HIMF as a transformative shift toward a more organized, proactive framework for managing public health infrastructure across the country.

Under the plan, the HIMF will be funded through an earmarked portion of the national annual health budget, with resources allocated to both scheduled routine maintenance and emergency repairs for unexpected system failures. The initiative outlines three core operational priorities: building a centralized, comprehensive baseline inventory of all equipment and facility systems, rolling out standardized routine maintenance schedules across all public health sites, and outsourcing monitoring and maintenance services for high-need critical systems. These priority systems include mechanical infrastructure, electrical networks, plumbing, heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC), and building elevators.

“The intention is to develop operational manuals and a terms of reference and performance criteria with critical success factors and outsource the routine maintenance of these specific functions for our health facilities,” Tufton explained to parliamentary representatives.

Preparatory work for the fund is already underway, housed within the Ministry of Health and Wellness’ Health Infrastructure Planning and Project Management Division. To lead the development of the new program, St. Andrade Sinclair, the former regional director of the Western Regional Health Authority, has been reassigned to the ministry’s central headquarters to oversee the rollout process.

Per the ministry’s timeline, the 2025-2026 financial year will be dedicated to completing foundational work, including a free pilot program to test operational frameworks, ahead of a full national launch in the subsequent financial year. Roughly $1 billion has already been set aside in the current fiscal year’s budget to launch the initiative. Tufton stressed that the proactive maintenance model is critical to eliminating the unplanned equipment and facility breakdowns that have disrupted patient care for years, noting that such disruptions are entirely avoidable with proper advance planning.