Kamuzu Central Hospital


Kamuzu Central Hospital is a tertiary referral hospital in the city of Lilongwe,. It is estimated to have 780 beds, although the true number of patients always exceeds the number of beds. It serves approximately 5 million people, referred from five district hospitals and from other parts of Malawi and parts of neighboring Tanzania, Zambia, Mozambique and Zimbabwe.

Location

The hospital is located in an area of the city of Lilongwe called Area 33, south of the Lingazi Namilomba Forest Reserve and the Lilongwe Wildlife Centre; adjacent to Kamuzu College of Nursing. The geographical coordinates of the hospital are:13°58'37.0"S, 33°47'11.0"E.

Overview

Kamuzu Central Hospital is a large referral hospital that serves as the referral hospital for the Central Region of Malawi. It is the referral hospital for about 5 million people. As of May 2020, it had about 60 doctors and about 300 nurses. As of 2019, the hospital admitted as many as 25,000 children annually. That is an average of about 70 children daily.
In April 2012, the late Bingu wa Mutharika, the third President of Malawi was admitted to Kamuzu Central Hospital and was diagnosed with cardiac arrest.

History

The hospital was built in 1977 by the Danish International Development Agency, with money provided by the government of Denmark. Political problems cropped up before the hospital was complete. Only the first phase was finished.
The departments that were left out included Obstetrics & Gynecology including Antenatal care Orthopedics Psychiatry and Tuberculosis unit.
From 1977 until 2004, the hospital was known as Lilongwe Central Hospital. In 2004, it rebranded to its current name.

Collaboration and partnerships

Kamuzu Central Hospital has a partnership with the University of North Carolina. The objective of the collaboration is to "identify innovative, culturally acceptable, and affordable methods to improve the health of the people of Malawi, through research, capacity building, and care".
The hospital also receives support from Baylor Pediatric AIDS Initiative. Additional support came from the German Hospital Partnership MAGNET, administered through the German Corporation for International Cooperation GmbH. Funding continued until 2015, having started in 2008.