Nakuru County Governor Lee Kinyanjui on Thursday designated Dr Daniel Wainaina Ndung’u to the workplace in an acting limit.
“This is to advise the public that Dr Daniel Wainaina Ndung’u has been selected acting boss official for Public Health taking effect right now,” said Kinyanjui in an articulation.
Before the arrangement, Dr Wainaina, who holds a Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery degree and a Masters in Public Health, filled in as the county’s Deputy County Director of Medical Services..
“Dr Wainaina is an accomplished doctor having worked as a Medical Officer at Nakuru Nakuru Level Five Hospital, and as a Senior Medical Officer in Eldoret East,” said Kinyanjui.
Praising King’ori in March, Kinyajui portrayed the late Official as ‘a submitted worker pioneer, who extraordinarily upheld the region in its reaction to the Coronavirus pandemic’.
“He was in the bleeding edge in the battle against Coronavirus. He assembled, prepared, and facilitated the general wellbeing of workers as well as vulnerable groups in the in the region. He was instrumental in laying our medical care technical plan that brought about the overhaul of administration conveyance and framework. He was energetic about outcomes and invested wholeheartedly in making Nakuru a superior county,” said Kinyanjui.
King’ori was the third senior individual from the executive to capitulate to Coronavirus in Nakuru.
The region’s Representative Overseer of Political Undertakings, Wilfred Chebochok, had six days sooner surrendered to Coronavirus related complexities.
James Ochieng’, the couny’s Overseer of Streets and Transport, surrendered to the infection in September 2020.
Talking on April 3 after the inconvenience of a lockdown in five areas, including Nakuru, Kinyanjui said health facilities were feeling the squeeze to manage the rising number of patients.
“Nakuru County Health Department has been feeling the squeeze because of the quantity of individuals who have turned positive and needing clinical consideration. All ICU beds in the County are full and in the last three to four days, we have needed to move patients out of Nakuru,” said the lead kinyajui on April 3.
He added: “We are likewise attempting to grow oxygen supply to public and private clinics. We, accordingly, appeal to the Government through the Ministry of Health for more help to ensure oxygen is accessible.”