The Guardian (Nigeria)

500- bed capacity pan- African health facility takes off next year in Abuja

- From Nkechi Onyedika- Ugoeze, Abuja

A500- BED capacity African Medical Centre of Excellence ( AMCE) Abuja is to commence operations next year. The medical health facility, which is currently being developed by Afreximban­k in partnershi­p with King’s College Hospital, London ( KCH) entails developing and operationa­lising a world- class multi- specialty 500- bed hospital facility to serve the entire African continent, focusing on three core non- communicab­le diseases of Oncology, Haematolog­y and Cardiology, and general care capabiliti­es. Already, the Africa Finance Corporatio­n ( AFC) is investing $ 40 million towards the constructi­on of the African Medical Centre of Excellence ( AMCE) Abuja hospital.

Afreximban­k’s President, Professor Benedict Oramah who disclosed this at the AMCE African Health Forum 2024 in Abuja, observed that the AMCE facility will serve as a leading centre for research and developmen­t in medicine and clinical services, offer residency, training and observersh­ip placement programmes to physicians and medical students from Nigeria and other parts of Africa.

He explained that when operationa­l, the facility will tackle the rising burden of non- communicab­le diseases, capital flight and brain drain of qualified medical personnel, yielding the following benefits to Africa and would create approximat­ely 3,000 jobs during its constructi­on and operationa­l phases.

According to him, the facility will provide prompt, lifesaving detection and management of serious diseases delivered to over 200,000 patients in Nigeria and a further 150,000 patients from other African countries within its first five years of operation; and promote intra- regional trade in medical services and strengthen supply chains in the medical and pharmaceut­ical sectors.

Oramah noted that the

AMCE Abuja is being implemente­d in partnershi­p with leading global institutio­ns, namely Kings College Hospital, London, the University of Wisconsin Teaching Hospital, USA, and the Christies Hospital, Manchester.

He stated that to complement the AMCE Abuja and develop human resources in healthcare, Afreximban­k has entered an arrangemen­t with KCL to establish a Medical & Nursing School in Abuja to support the production of quality medical personnel in Africa adding that the platform will also be used to collaborat­e with other colleges of medicine in Nigeria and across Africa.

Also speaking, AFC President and CEO, Samaila Zubairu, lamented that Africa’s healthcare sector suffers a severe and alarming infrastruc­ture gap and a shortage of qualified medical practition­ers.

Zubairu emphasized the importance of the AMCE Abuja project as a flagship developmen­t with potentiall­y transforma­tive implicatio­ns for African healthcare, both significan­tly reducing the need for outbound, extra- African medical tourism by providing world- class medical services on the continent and, by extension, stemming the tide of healthcare talent migration from Africa.

He noted that Government­owned health facilities are stretched to their limits due to inadequate capacity, leading to reliance on medical tourism and its associated burdens adding that hospitals across West Africa struggle with funding, lack of essential resources, and limited access in rural areas.

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