Mwale Medical and Technology City (MMTC) Hamptons Hospital has begun a full 24-hour operation in all departments after a successful 6-month trial run.
The facility, based in Butere is serving Kenyans and foreigners in medical tourism since 2019 and has been carrying out 24-hour test runs since last year.
The hospital cited increased demand for health services.
“The 24-hour operation has seen increased demand since it was enacted last year. Over 100KM of streets at MMTC have been installed with thousands of solar streetlights, with around the clock security patrols that enhances the smooth running of the operations at the hospital,” the hospital said in a statement on Tuesday.
Among the departments that will now operate on a 24-hour basis is the newly completed maternity wing with a capacity to deliver 96 newborn babies per day in the ultra-modern obstetrics department.
Others are Oncology, Inpatient and outpatient, Radiology, Laboratory, Pharmacy, Trauma, Special surgery, Renal, Diabetic, Ear-nose-throat, Infectious disease and ICU.
The hospital opened in 2019 and accepts all patients, including ones with NHIF cards.
Kakamega County residents with NHIF cards are treated without paying extra co-payment charges.
The facility is associated with American-based investor Julius Mwale.
The tycoon is building a Sh228 billion (2 billion US dollars) sustainable metropolis centred around a state-of-the-art medical and technology complex located within Butere Sub-County, Kakamega County.
The 5000-bed capacity hospital will be able to serve 12,000 patients daily at full capacity once completed.
The City has been built as a " green Silicon Forest", with an innovation district hosting global brands and further aims at transforming the lives of residents and the country at large.
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