Gulf Today

Hospital upgrades to meet demand

- Mariecar Jara-puyod, Senior Reporter

DUBAI: A leading hospital group in the UAE has upgraded its Dubai facilities to help address the observed increase in cardiac cases and lifestyler­elated diseases.

With the upgrade is the enhancemen­t of its pharmacy services through the installati­on of a robotic system that error-free dispenses medicines within 30 seconds from the time the requisitio­n has been logged in the database by a pharmacist.

The robot is programmed in such a way that it shelves fast/slow-moving items accordingl­y. Manpower comes in only in cases of malfunctio­n until the stand-by technical people rectify the disruption.

On Wednesday when Gulf Today toured the annex of the Zulekha Hospital-dubai, operationa­l since Dec. 2018, Group managing director Taher Shams, in response to the question regarding the consequent need for more highly-qualified and trained human resources, said: “We are constantly upgrading systems and recruiting experience­d experts from diverse background­s as we need to service patients from diverse nationalit­ies in the UAE.”

“We also cater to patients who travel from as far as the US and Europe as well as the neighbouri­ng regions like the Middle East and North Africa for super-special is ed high-risk treatments ,” he also said.

An addition of 100 clinical and non-clinical staff had been hired raising the manpower to 1,069: “This number will continue to rise.”

The upgrade and annex to the hospital in Al Nahda, Dubai began three years back, continues.

A source said ongoing is the retrofitin­g of a dedicated radiation therapy centre for the other non-communicab­le disease—cancer—which has been observed to spike in the region not only by the health profession­als and authoritie­s but also by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO).

Shams said: “We reported showing a 13 per cent increase year-on-year of cardiac problems between 2017 and 2018, so we are making a huge effort to reduce this number. Our goal is to help make the UAE a super hub for critical care, which is equipped with additional cathlabs and the latest technology in cardiac care. The first open heart procedure was successful­ly carried out this April for a 38-year-old patient.”

He cited WHO records showing that heart diseases to be the “biggest killers in the Middle East; 30 per cent of which are “in the UAE alone” and which UAE Vision 2021 targets to reduce alongside other death-causing lifestyles.

 ?? Kamal Kassim/gulf Today ?? The only human interventi­on needed in the release of medicines within 30 seconds is the command from the terminal.
Kamal Kassim/gulf Today The only human interventi­on needed in the release of medicines within 30 seconds is the command from the terminal.

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