Ethiopia has launched the US $3.6m Shashemene Hospital and handed over to the Oromia regional health bureau.
Shashemene Referal Hospital was originally constructed as a Tuberculosis and Leprosy center in 1940 by the Sudan Interior Mission (SIM). It was converted into a hospital in 1976.
The facility has a new state-of-the art outpatient department with maternity ward and emergency unit with operation room.
It features classified areas for ultra-sound, waiting rooms, and clinical rooms. The labor and delivery services is also united with family planning, voluntary counseling and testing, antiretroviral therapy (ART), and antenatal care for prevention-of-mother-to-child-transmission.
The hospital will also serve and cater as an emergency center to address the acute medical needs of around 8 million people in nearby communities in the Oromia and Southern Nations Nationalities and Peoples regions.
The Shashemene Hospital project follows earlier projects funded by CDC including the construction of six regional public health laboratories, nine outpatient centers, and a national public health training center in Addis Ababa as part U.S.