Founded 1960s Care system Nonprofit organization | Emergency department Yes Number of beds 200 | |
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Hospital type Teaching, general medical services |
Erdoğan Hospital, also known as the Digfer Hospital and the Somalia-Turkey Training and Research Hospital, is a hospital in Mogadishu, Somalia.
Contents
Overview
The Digfer Hospital was constructed in the 1960s, with Soviet engineers contracted to build its premises. It served as an important historic institution in Somalia's capital. Following the start of the civil war in the early 1990s, the hospital intermittently closed down. It also briefly operated under the aegis of the International Medical Corps.
In 2013, the Federal Government of Somalia reached an agreement with the Turkish authorities to refurbish and modernize the Digfer Hospital's infrastructure and services in keeping with international standards. In January 2015, the hospital was officially reopened at an inauguration ceremony in Mogadishu led by President of Somalia Hassan Sheikh Mohamud and President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. The Digfer Hospital was concurrently renamed Erdogan Hospital in honour of Erdoğan.
The renovated 200-bed Somalia-Turkey Training and Research Hospital was constructed by Turkey's international development body, the Turkish International Cooperation and Development Agency (TIKA). It has a $135.7 million operating budget, $85.6 million of which is slated to be covered by the Turkish authorities over the next five years.
Facilities and services
The 13,500 square-meter indoor premises includes 20 neonatal incubators, 14 newborn intensive care beds, 12 intensive care beds, 4 operating rooms, and laboratory and radiology units.
Additionally, it has general surgery, neurosurgery, plastic surgery, child care, obstetrics, urology, internal medicine, anesthesia, dentistry and optometry departments.
Staff
As of January 2015, the hospital will be staffed by about 91 Somali and 52 Turkish hospital administrators, head doctors, administrative directors or financial directors, as well as 40 Somali and 5 Turkish security personnel. Around 36 Somali assistants are also scheduled to participate in the facility's annual training program.