Inside look of the elevated county Hospital

Nakuru County boasts having a new Referral hospital following the upgrade of Nakuru Level 5 hospital to level 6.

Assessments and successful approvals were done by the Kenya Medical Board and the National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF).

It was also a double score for Nakuru County as Naivasha Sub County Hospital was also elevated to level 5 status by the two bodies from its previous level 4 Sub County Hospital.

The upgrade of Naivasha hospital effectively elevates it to County status.

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The status of the newly elevated Nakuru Level 6 will be officially unveiled soon after necessary paperwork is completed.

The elevation of the Nakuru county referral hospital currently serving a population of more than 2.1 million people against the recommended 1 million.

This now brings it at par with Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH) and the Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital (MTRH), which will see it handle referrals from the town and neighbouring counties.

The commissioning of the Sh500 million state of the art specialized mother and baby unit by First Lady Margaret Kenyatta at the same facility last year, was the latest in a series of upgrades aimed at offering specialized medical care and handling referrals from more than six counties.

The 250 bed capacity maternity facility christened Margaret Kenyatta Mother and Baby Unit, the second largest in the country after Pumwani hospital.

It is projected to offer affordable and quality health care to residents of Nakuru, Bomet, Baringo, Narok, Kericho, Samburu, Laikipia and Nyandarua counties.

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Dr. Osore was upbeat that the upgrade will improve provision of quality and affordable medical services to residents of Nakuru and surrounding counties

“We want to ensure that the hospital accommodates more patients, work is made easier for staff as the facility is converted from a general hospital to a teaching and referral facility,” he said.

“Cancer patients can now get chemotherapy services at the Nakuru Level 6 Hospital’s (Previously Rift Valley Provincial General Hospital) new oncology unit. 

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Before the unit was built, most cancer patients sought treatment at the Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH) and the Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital (MTRH),” he explained.

The unit has 10 chemotherapy seats and is manned by an oncologist, a medical officer, a pharmacist, four nurses and a physiotherapist.

The unit has the capacity to serve at least 30 patients a day. The governor said that in the past four months 2,156 patients have been received at the unit.

The opening of the mother and baby unit which is part of First Lady’s initiative to improve maternal and child health was also a boon for the County’s oldest and largest medical facility.

Mrs. Kenyatta has been in the forefront dedicating resources to compliment the government’s efforts to reduce maternal and child deaths through several campaigns.

At its inauguration in October 2018, The First Lady said that she was impressed that the number of maternal and child deaths countrywide had significantly dropped while uptake of vaccination and maternal care services had improved considerably.

She urged women to enrol in free prenatal and postnatal care programmes offered by the government under the auspices of Linda Mama programme.

Children born with complications get specialized care at the neonatal intensive care unit.

The unit also promotes Kangaroo mother care programme for those born prematurely.

“Our mothers are entitled to deliver babies in a safe environment under care of skilled health workers. This wing is equipped with facilities that will afford Kenyans maternity, pediatric, diagnostic oncology and gynecological services” observed Mrs. Kenyatta.

A nurse at newly elevated Nakuru Level 6 hospital’s intensive care unit operates one of the new machines installed at the facility. The upgrade of the medical facility brings it at par with KNH and MTRH.

She noted the facility, which is the first of its kind in the region will drive the government’s key pillar of delivering quality, safe and affordable maternal-child care by reducing mortality rates.

Other services offered at the upgraded hospital include dialysis, child clinic, immunization and family planning. 

The facility has four ultra-modern theatres.

The hospital now boasts of several modern theatres, an intensive care unit, a pharmacy, laboratory, an imaging centre, antenatal and postnatal clinics.

In May last year, the Nakuru governor Lee Kinyanjui further commissioned Sh4 million dialysis machine donated by the Safaricom Foundation at the hospital.

This brought to 16 the number of functional dialysis machines at the renal unit.

The Health Cabinet Secretary Sicily Kariuki had earlier observed that even with the anticipated upgrade of the hospital, a multi-sectoral approach is required in improving access to quality and affordable health care.

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