Briefly
The Cabinet of Ministers approved the implementation procedure for the Medical Guarantees Program (MGP) for 2026 with funding of over UAH 191.6 billion. The capitation rate for family doctors will rise to UAH 1,007.30, and the program will cover 46 packages of medical services. This was announced by Prime Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko.
Priorities
In MGP‑2026 the government concentrated resources on areas with the highest burden. The most attention is on cardiovascular diseases: UAH 3.2 billion is allocated for stroke treatment and UAH 1.5 billion for heart attacks. Tariffs for cardiac surgery have been updated, in particular for coronary artery bypass grafting, and support for pediatric cardiac surgery has been strengthened.
Funding for emergency medical care increases to UAH 12.7 billion, and the "Affordable Medicines" program to UAH 8.7 billion. Separately, spending has been increased for the treatment of severe wounds, rehabilitation after injuries, strokes and heart attacks, as well as for inpatient psychiatric care. Special attention is paid to children and medical workers in frontline regions, and to a new package for children under 4 in vulnerable life circumstances.
"In MGP‑2026 we focused funding on the areas with the greatest burden to ensure access to critical care and reduce the number of cases leading to disability"
— Yuliia Svyrydenko, Prime Minister
What it means in practice
Raising the capitation rate and expanding the packages means two things: first, family doctors receive greater resources for prevention and management of chronic patients; second, more money is directed to complex and costly cases — strokes, heart attacks, cardiac surgery and rehabilitation. This reduces the risk of delays in care and long‑term disability.
Increased funding for emergency care and support for frontline regions is an important element of security: in areas of active hostilities the speed of access to care often determines life or death and minimizes the consequences of injuries.
Numbers to remember
In 2025 almost 24 million Ukrainians used the program; doctors provided over 191 million medical services. More than 109,000 people received treatment for stroke, and about 36,000 for heart attack. These figures show the system is already operating under heavy load — and additional resources should increase its resilience.
Prevention and long‑term effect
From 1 January 2026 the Ministry of Health plans to launch a program of preventive medical check‑ups for citizens aged 40+, offering free check‑ups to detect diseases at early stages. This is a step toward reducing future inpatient treatment and rehabilitation costs — an investment in the country's health economy.
Assessment and risks
Experts point to two key conditions for success: effective logistics for distributing funds and real on‑the‑ground monitoring of implementation. If funds reach their destinations quickly and transparently — the impact of the investment will be felt; if not — there is a risk that some resources will not translate into better results for patients.
Conclusion
MGP‑2026 is not just numbers in a budget. It is a reallocation of resources toward acute and long‑term needs: cardiac and emergency care, children, rehabilitation and support for healthcare in frontline regions. Now the task for the government and the medical community is to prove that this money works for the health and safety of Ukrainians, not only on paper. Whether we have sufficient institutional discipline and operational oversight is the question whose answer will determine the real effect of this program.