The Aga Khan University Hospital, Nairobi (AKUH, N) has opened a new Specialty and Executive Clinic in Karen, as part of its strategy to increase access to specialised care.
The facility becomes the hospital’s 52nd Outreach Medical Centre.
The Clinic will offer specialised services in cardiology, nephrology, pediatrics, dermatology, obstetrics and gynecology, family medicine and ENT, among others.
The Clinic will run a one-stop Cardiac Care Centre with critical tests such as Exercise Stress Test, Echo and ECG among others. It will also have an executive wellness program supported by key diagnostic services including X-ray, Ultrasound, Mammography, and a well-equipped laboratory.
Speaking during the official opening ceremony in Nairobi today, Hospital Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Rashid Khalani said that the clinic is part of the hospital’s strategy of taking specialised services to where people live and work.
“Three years ago, we began implementing a new strategy of running specialist clinics at our outreach centres which previously only offered primary care. The clinics are run by our specialists from the main hospital, ensuring that the same quality of care offered at the main hospital is available in the neighbourhoods.” Khalani said.
The Karen Clinic comes hot on the heels of the opening of the Roysambu Specialty Care Centre which in addition to specialized clinics also provides day surgeries, dialysis, chemotherapy, and endoscopy.
“Increasing access to quality care is part of our values and guided by that we intend to open many more centres in years to come.” Khalani added.
While presiding over the launch, Nairobi County governor Johnson Sakaja said that his Government will work with private healthcare institutions to increase access to quality healthcare services.
“As the County Government, we continue to give you and other players in this sector every support that you need. My administration took office determined to dignify the lives of the people of Nairobi. Few things are more important for a life of dignity than health. That is why we are working closely with the 7,500 community health workers to meet the people of Nairobi where they are. Nairobi county is the first county to pay its community workers every month.” Sakaja said in a speech read on his behalf by Nairobi County Secretary Patrick Analo.
Aga Khan University Hospital, Nairobi operates 49 medical centres in Kenya and three in Uganda, treating almost 700,000 patients annually. A teaching hospital of the Aga Khan University, it is a centre for advanced training programmes in oncology, neurology, cardiology, infectious diseases, neonatology, and nuclear medicine. As an institution of knowledge, the hospital supports the university’s academic programmes.