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Joseph Maina Mungai (born in Kenya, 4 April 1932; died 13 August 2003) was the first African to become Dean of the School of Medicine at the University of Nairobi. [1] Besides a medical journal editor position, [2] and a long-term stint as a newspaper correspondent, he was also Head and faculty member of the Department of Anatomy, .
This photo taken in 6 June 2014 shows the administration block at Nairobi School with the school motto emblazoned on it. Nairobi School was established in 1902 around the present day Nairobi Railways Club as a European school to serve the families of the I.B.E.A. Company and, a while later, the white settler community.
Karen Hospital was co-founded by a Kenyan medical couple one of whom is Dr. Betty Gikonyo, a pediatric cardiologist, who is one of the 13 female doctors (8 African and 5 Caucasians), to graduate with the Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery (MBChB) from the Nairobi University School of Medicine in 1975. [5]
The Kenya Medical Training College [1] (KMTC) is a state Corporation under the Ministry of Health entrusted with the role of training of the various health disciplines in the health sector, to serve the local, regional and international markets.
Makerere University School of Medicine, Mulago, Kampala; Mbarara University School of Medicine, Mbarara; Uganda Martyrs University School of Medicine, St. Francis Hospital Nsambya, Kampala; Kabale University School of Medicine, Kabale; Soroti University School of Health Sciences, Soroti; King Ceasor University School of Medicine, Kampala
Karithi Ruth Wanjiru Nduati [1] is a Kenyan Pediatrician and Epidemiologist who also teaches at the University of Nairobi College of Health Sciences. [2] [3] She is also currently leading an interdisciplinary program through the University of Nairobi School of Medicine to educate physician-researchers to best implement HIV treatment and prevention methods backed by research.
In 2010, Nyongesa and her husband, a practicing pharmacist in the Houston-area, Texas, United States, started Texas Cancer Centre Nairobi. Initially the Centre only offered chemotherapy treatment as an outpatient service. Later, the couple borrowed KSh100 million (approx. US$1 million), to build an inpatient facility at a second location in ...
The hospital was constructed between 2003 and March 2006. It had 450 employees as at 2015. The hospital also has satellite branches in Chester House (in Nairobi's city centre), Karatina, Meru, Nyeri, Nakuru, Kitengela and Mombasa. She plans to open a Betty Gikonyo School of Nursing in Ngong. [2] [3]