Daily Trust

FG commission­s facilities at Katsina FMC

- From Tijjani Ibrahim, Katsina

The federal government has commission­ed newly constructe­d Accident and Emergency complex, Emergency Paediatric Units (EPU), Molecular/Microbiolo­gy Laboratory complex, Medical Intensive Care Unit and a Ring Road at the Federal Medical Centre (FMC), Katsina.

The projects commission­ed by Katsina State governor, Aminu Bello Masari, and the Minister of State for Health, Senator Adeleke Mamora, on Tuesday, were executed by the Governing Council and Management of the Federal Medical Centre, Katsina.

In his address, Senator Mamora expressed the federal government’s commitment to the provision of affordable health care delivery to Nigerians.

He added that the federal government had also increased allocation­s to all health institutio­ns in the country and followed it up with early release of funds to the institutio­ns to ensure delivery of quality health services.

“It has been a commitment of President Muhammadu Buhari to ensure provision of affordable health care services to all Nigerians in the efforts to achieve universal health coverage,” he said.

The minister also lauded the Memorandum of Understand­ing (MoU) between the federal government and the Katsina State on the conversion of the FMC, Katsina, to a Federal Teaching Hospital, saying that would assist the state in both educationa­l and health sector developmen­t.

Earlier in her welcome address, the chairperso­n of the Governing Council of the Centre, Hajiya Hannatu Hakilu, said the council had since its inaugurati­on in 2018 been working to ensure that the centre lives up to its core mandate of reducing human morbidity and mortality rates, eliminatin­g and eradicatin­g diseases and significan­tly increasing quality of life and its expectancy in the North West zone of Nigeria.

“What we are here to commission today is just a fraction of our results. Others can be seen from the steady reduction in the morbidity and mortality rates by about 40% , from 22 deaths per 1000 in 2017 to 13 deaths per 1000 in 2021,” she said.

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