During this pandemic times, Hospitals are the only hope but things are absolutely the opposite in Nairobi-based Lang’ata Hospital.
Yesterday, Lang’ata Hospital was raided by Kenya Medical Laboratory Technicians and Technology Board and closed down indefinitely after it emerged that its laboratory has been carrying out fake Covid-19 tests.
Beware of laboratories which are swindling unsuspecting members of the public by conducting FAKE COVID-19 TESTS. COVID-19 TEST is free of charge to the public pic.twitter.com/LA4ObjoQuf
According to initial probe by Kenya Medical Laboratory Technicians and Technology Board, the hospital management has allegedly been colluding with some staff at the Kenya Medical Research Institute (Kemri) to charge and conduct unauthorised Covid-19 tests.
Kenyan Bulletin has been informed that the hospital has been charging patients Sh5,500 for the tests then ferrying them in an ambulance to Kemri for the actual tests.
The hospital has been misleading the public that it has the capacity to conduct the tests. While many would ask what the hospital has done wrong as far as the set procedure is followed, KEMRI was against it.
I honestly don’t see what Lang’ata Hospital did wrong.that story by @ntvkenya was just sensational and based on ignorance. The tests are being done in KEMRI, so what is the issue? The cost? Every Hospital now wants to test patients before admission. So what is the issue? pic.twitter.com/TuAl76dPfi
— Kenya Medical Research Institute (@KEMRI_Kenya) July 5, 2020
Patrick Kisabei, CEO of the laboratory technicians’ board, said they are trying to establish if there was any memorandum of understanding of any public institution that has the capacity to test Covid-19.
“The reason why we have decided to close this institution is that they are lying to the public that they are doing the Covid-19 tests while they are not,” he said.
During the raid, the team also found out that the hospital was stocking and using expired reagents for tests. They also found government labelled test kits which are not for sale at the facility despite it being a privately owned and run.
The director of the hospital, the chief operations officer, laboratory manager and the lab technologists were all arrested and spent the night in police cells as investigations commenced.