Turkish cities' hospitals are developing stars in the country's modernizing healthcare system. These enormous complexes helped the nation avoid straining its healthcare system during the COVID-19 epidemic by bringing together many hospitals under one roof, together with the most cutting-edge medical technology and hundreds of staff members. Hospitals serve thousands of people daily around the nation and are supported by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who is credited with reforming the country's ailing healthcare system.
Nowadays, 19 hospitals are operating, and Erdoğan recently declared that a new city hospital would open in the nation's capital, Ankara, in a few months. Erdoğan once referred to the initiative as his "dream." In addition, 14 city hospitals are being built. The overall number of beds in new hospitals will be 18,794, compared to the 25,298 beds in hospitals that have just recently opened. While Erdoğan recently disclosed that a new city hospital was developed for the northern province of Ordu, two further city hospitals will open in the coming months in the western province of Izmir and the northwestern provinces of Kocaeli.
With 3,724 beds and 938 clinics, the hospital in Ankara's Etlik neighbourhood will be the largest in Türkiye when it opens. The hospitals offer high-quality medical services resembling cutting-edge private medical institutions.
The project, which specifically targets suburban areas, aims to raise health standards by resolving a doctor shortage and dramatically raising the number of hospital beds available. The government has chosen a public-private partnership approach for the development and management of the complexes in order to guarantee the quality of service. The government merely pays rent for the medical imaging, laboratories, security, upkeep, and wages of healthcare employees; the city hospitals are leased to private corporations.
The project, which specifically targets suburban areas, aims to raise health standards by resolving a doctor shortage and dramatically raising the number of hospital beds available. The government has chosen a public-private partnership approach for the development and management of the complexes in order to guarantee the quality of service. The government merely pays rent for the medical imaging, laboratories, security, upkeep, and wages of healthcare employees; the city hospitals are leased to private corporations.
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