

The Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Council (KMPDC)
has shut down an unregistered dental facility in Nairobi following media
reports linking it to adverse patient outcomes, as investigations into illegal
medical practice continue.
In a statement, the Council said its attention had been
drawn to reports of a dental procedure that resulted in harm to a patient at
Life Clinic, an unregistered facility operating in the Kawangware area of
Nairobi.
The regulator moved swiftly, working jointly with security
agencies to inspect and enforce compliance at the facility.
“The Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Council
informs the public that its attention was drawn to media reports concerning a
dental procedure that resulted in adverse patient outcomes at an unregistered
facility,” KMPDC Chief Executive Dr David Kariuki said.
According to KMPDC, inspectors visited the premises but did
not find the proprietor present at the time of inspection.
The affected patient was subsequently traced, evacuated and
referred to Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH) for specialised care.
“The patient in question was traced, evacuated and referred
for further management at Kenyatta National Hospital,” the Council said, adding
that as of January 9, 2026, the patient was receiving treatment and undergoing
corrective procedures.
Further investigations revealed that the individual
associated with the clinic was also operating additional illegal
establishments.
These facilities were identified and subjected to
enforcement action by the authorities.
During the operation, Council officers discovered another
patient, a 22-year-old man, admitted in an unauthorised inpatient area at another clinic which was also found to be illegal and unregistered.
“During the enforcement activities, Council officers
identified another patient, a 22-year-old male, within an unauthorised
inpatient area at the Medical Centre, an illegal and unregistered facility,
where he was not receiving appropriate medical care,” the statement noted.
The patient was evacuated and referred to KNH for proper
medical management.
Following the inspections, the affected facilities were
closed, and relevant information handed over to security agencies.
KMPDC said investigations are ongoing and that individuals
linked to the illegal operations are being pursued by law enforcement.
“Investigations are ongoing and the individual(s) concerned
are being sought by law enforcement authorities,” the Council said.
In the same operation, KMPDC also closed two clinics, citing substandard operations.
The Council clarified that these closures arose from broader
compliance inspections and were unrelated to the ownership of the previously
cited illegal facilities.
The regulator urged members of the public to remain vigilant
and report suspected unlicensed practitioners and illegal health facilities.
“The Council encourages members of the public to report
suspected unlicensed practitioners, illegal facilities or repeated adverse
patient outcomes,” the statement said.

















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