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According to the Health Facilities Register, maintained by the Ministry of Health, Community Development, Gender, Elderly and Children there were 8,497 medical care facilities in the country, 62% of them public. As of 2020, there are 337 hospitals listed in the register. [3]
The Health Sector Strategic Plan III (2009–15) is guided by the Vision 2015 [2] and guides planning for health facilities. [3] The Big Results Now (BRN) was copied from the Malaysian Model of Development and placed health as a key national result area and mainly was for priority setting, focused planning and efficient resource use. [4]
The Ministry of Health is a government ministry of Tanzania. Its central offices are located in Dodoma . Its mission is to "facilitate the provision of basic health services that are good, quality, equitable, accessible, affordable, sustainable[,] and gender-sensitive".
The Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre is a large hospital in Moshi, Tanzania opened in March 1971 by the Good Samaritan Foundation. It has 630 official beds, 90 canvas, 40 baby incubators, 1852 students and 1300 staff. [1] It is part of a complex including Kilimanjaro Clinical Research Institute and Kilimanjaro Christian Medical University ...
ORCI maintains an inpatient facility with capacity of 256 beds. [3] In Tanzania, an estimated 35,000 new cases of cancer were diagnosed in 2014, of whom about 21,000 (60 percent) died, the same year. The country has only two cancer hospitals, with the main one, ORCI, located in the capital, Dar es Salaam.
Sports organisations of Tanzania (2 C) Pages in category "Medical and health organisations based in Tanzania" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total.
This page was last edited on 1 February 2020, at 18:57 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
President Jakaya Kikwete in May 2014 appealed to health workers in Tanzania to ensure that lives of women and children are not at risk during delivery. [20] In Tanzania, two thirds of women give birth in their own homes, because there are very few health facilities within reach that can provide life-saving emergency services. [21]