Health
Health care delivery, minister inaugurates bolori general hospital, presents 10 ambulances to medical facilities in Maiduguri.
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Health care delivery, minister inaugurates Bolori General Hospital, presents 10 ambulances to medical facilities in Maiduguri.
By Madu Mohammed, Maiduguri.
To strengthen health care delivery, the Minister of Health, Professor Mohammed Ali Pate, has commissioned the Bolori II General Hospital constructed by the administration of Governor Babagana Umara Zulum in Maiduguri, the Borno state capital.
The 150-bed capacity hospital, which offers specialised maternity and general diagnostic services, has two theatre complexes, a radiography section, a pharmacy, a baby care unit and laboratory facilities.
Speaking before the symbolic tape cutting, the minister who commended Governor Zulum for transforming what hitherto operated as an infectious disease facility. Said “your Excellency, thank you on behalf of all of us, not only here in Borno State, but the entire North East, for this amazing work transforming this magnificent building into Brigadier Abba Kyari General Hospital here in Bolori II”.
“From what we have heard, it will be a highly impactful effort to help drive maternal mortality, which aligns with the president’s direction. We will work together with you, but we want to thank you for this, and may God reward you”, Pate stated.
In his remarks, Governor Zulum explained that the hospital was remodelled entirely with the construction of additional facilities to serve Bolori II and the surrounding communities that lacked secondary health facilities in their neighbourhood.
The brief ceremony was attended by a former vice president, Ambassador Babagana Kingibe; the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Mrs. Didi Esther Walson-Jack; the Secretary to the Borno State Government, Bukar Tijani, among other senior government officials.
Also, during the visit, the minister distributed the fleet of 10 ambulances to different health facilities to strengthen emergency medical services.
The distribution of the new ambulances, each equipped with medical technology, targets hospitals and clinics in neighbourhoods to bridge existing gaps in emergency healthcare access.
