That said, part of the corruption in the hospitals arises because of weak systems. These weak systems can only be corrected by investing in technology. We are not investing in technology so we are bound to remain with weak systems. There you have your vicious cycle.
I don't completely buy this argument, which I have also heard in relation to how the national government does some of its business. Technology of itself will never be a solution to what is, essentially, a fundamental "national character-flaw". All it will do is make things slightly more difficult and necessitate more creativity in looting.
Look at it this way: at the bottom of whatever technological system one has in place to supposedly prevent theft, there is something as simple as just entering data into some computer system. As long as the person doing that can be bought, the system is not of much use.
There are way too many people in Kenya who have no problems with public theft. What's more they know they can get away with it and so have little incentive to stop. As long as that is the case, the theft will continue.
To my mind, the best way to deal with corruption is Lee Kwan Yew's Singapore way: no matter how small or how big, punishment is quick and painful---literally when it includes caning.
If, on the other hand, by technology you mean mechanizing more things so that there are fewer people employed who can steal, then the problem still remains: the procurement, servicing, replacement, etc. of the technology will be the vehicles for theft.
The people who do the big-time stealing have the means and opportunity to get around any system. In fact, it is they who will oversee the setting-up and use of any system that is supposed to stop them from stealing.
Russia hospital was ruined by the Kenyatta regime with support from the Brits. It was a state of the art hospital at inception and could easily have rivaled Kenyatta National Hospital. History and geopolitics aside, it suffers from the same mismanagement that is killing other hospitals.
That could be so. I don't know exactly how Kenyatta and the British ruined the hospital; so I can't comment on that. But I note that both have been long-gone, and it has been the local management f**king-up for years on end; it is they that I am more concerned about right now. And knowing that other public hospitals are similarly messed up does not give me much cheer: because of what one might call "historical" or "cultural" reasons, I have "extra" interest in that particular hospital.
P.S.: My relative that I mentioned earlier has now moved from "Russia"---but not without a final bit of unpleasantness. A doctor eventually came to see him, and it went something like this: "
Yes, you are seriously ill. Vey much so. From this and that. We need to give you injections of A, B, and C. That will cost so much, and we require payment before a syringe is even pulled out."