Once inside there, the hospital staff tell you daktari hayuko or the queue is long. After a few minutes they tell you they can refer you to one of the outside facilities. After clearing buildings on road reserves those chemists and labs should be brought down. Another interesting thing I saw in Mama Lucy is that maternity wards are fuller than general wards. @FieldMarshal CouchP was right, wa Kenya wana zaana sana
It’s only that the maternity fee was waived and women have to go to hospital to deliver. Otherwise, many people are suffering with illnesses at home because they cannot afford medical care. kununua painkillers tu na other over the counter medications.
Ulikuwa umeenda kuzaa.
How do you start hii biashara ya kuleta madawa…?
you start by enrolling for a medicine related course in any college, graduate and bribe your way to a job in a ‘good’ government hospital. Kutoka hapo unalink na wasee mlikuwa nao campo wenye wanawork in bigger hospitals like knh. Wanaiba dawa huko kwao na mnatransport na zile taxi zinakuwanga hapo nje ya knh emergency entrance. (by now ushaongea na mtu wa kanjo mwenye ana man the space outside the hospital you work in akakutafutia kiwanja and you have erected/rented a kiosk there). Then you start referring patients from your hosi to your ‘chemist’ by prescribing meds that aren’t available in your hosi but are conveniently stocked in your ‘chemist’. The biz booms and you now open a bigger independent chemist (in those lower middle class estates) which has no trace of dirty ways, complete with a website. You do that for 5 years and quit your main job pale hosi
What about shipping from india?
na za “free” gava imenunua?