
On Tuesday, Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila, handed over 80-hospital bed to the Lagos State Government which includes a paediatrics unit and a dialysis centre according to report.
Speaking at the inauguration of the four-storey hospital, Gbajabiamila, who spent twenty years in the House of Representatives, said the project was just one of the many he had completed in the state to augment the efforts of the state government.
The Femi Gbajabiamila General
Hospital located in the Surulere area of Lagos State also includes a 300 KVA
generator, a 100KVA solar generator as well as a borehole and water filtration
system.
“The Femi Gbajabiamila General
Hospital was conceived from the knowledge that a populous and growing
metropolis such as Lagos cannot afford to be found wanting so far as access to
quality health care is concerned. This structure is an addition to support the
tremendous work the Lagos State government is doing in the area of healthcare
access,” the former Speaker of the House said.
He added, “I am proud that we have constructed over 250 roads in selected federal constituencies in the state especially Surulere 1 and 2 constituencies and completed 15 mini stadia.
“We facilitated heavy investment in
education and health care, including constructing and equipping over 20 ICT
centres in public schools where children are taught computer programming and
coding. We have provided a solar energy system to light up neighbourhoods and
support commercial trades in our constituencies,” he added.
In his remarks, Lagos State
Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, commended the President’s chief of staff for
making the state proud and complementing the efforts of the state government.
Sanwo-Olu announced that the state had set in motion plans to establish a medical university before the end of the year.
The governor promised that the proposed medical university would be well-equipped and would not only train but retain the best minds so that they would not be tempted to leave the country in search of greener pastures.
“The Lagos State Government will in
collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Health and the NUC another
university that will be called the Lagos State Medical University before the
end of this year,” he said, adding that the state government aims to ensure
that at least 1,500 doctors graduate from the proposed school yearly.
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