Pole for the stress. Kenya's healthcare system, for the most part, is for profit. Corruption, lack of clear policies, and enforcement from the Government make the situation even dire. Nothing has changed from Moi error to Uhuru error, and I doubt if things will change. To transform healthcare and everything in Kenya, you need to recalibrate millions of minds, attitudes, and consciences. Once you have a clean population on those paradigms, it will be easy to tweak all sectors to function as they should. Average Kenyan is a poor broker, petty liar, and someone looking to make money legally or illegally without thinking through. It doesn't matter where they go; they will replicate the vice at any level society propels them.
A professor, for instance, can dish out grades for a booty, or a doctor can cut shortcuts for a quick shilling. I think to date, millions of Kenyans have died of flimsy errors of misdiagnosis, gross incompetence, and outright murder. On the outright murder front, I genuinely believe some doctors love killing people, especially in Kenyatta Hospital, because once they schedule you for any head-related surgery, you will not make it. I think it is 90/10 based on a mini-assessment my wife did when her nephew died because of simple brain surgery. Please don't agree or let your family members do any surgery, unless in the leg, hands, or non-life-threatening body parts. You do brain, you will head to six feet under guarantee. If you have serious money, folks can get better treatment with an independent, verified doctor with years of track record. Even with that, you will be disappointed from time to time with the scam from the doctor's astonishingly incompetent stuff all the way to the chemist's corrupt ecosystem. In short, Kenya and pain can be used interchangeably! Sadly, most Kenyans don't know, and if they Know, they don't give a damn because brokenness/poverty /corruption/incompetence/lies, and mediocrity is part of everyday life.