Moscow Mayor's Office purchased 365 high-tech systems for nursing premature babies for 900 million rubles
Customers: Department of Health of the city of Moscow Moscow; Pharmaceuticals, Medicine, Healthcare Project date: 2022/07
Project's budget: 900 million rubles руб.
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2022: Moscow City Hall purchased 365 high-tech systems for nursing premature babies for 900 million rubles
The Moscow Mayor's Office purchased 365 high-tech systems for nursing premature babies for 900 million rubles. Anastasia Rakova, Deputy Mayor for Social Development, announced this on July 8, 2022.
According to her, the program to equip the capital's medical organizations with the latest equipment for nursing premature babies will significantly improve the quality of specialized medical care in the capital. By the end of 2023, it is planned to purchase a total of 475 units of the latest equipment for 24 medical organizations.
Incubators for newborns (couvezes) are necessary if the baby is born prematurely and with complications that require intensive treatment and maintenance of optimal ambient temperature. The latter is necessary so that the weakened body of the baby does not waste its own energy to maintain body temperature.
Anastasia Rakova said that part of the medical equipment is purchased under life cycle contracts. Such a form of procurement implies that the supplier ensures the operability of the equipment throughout its life. In total, 246 incubators have already been purchased under life cycle contracts for perinatal centers and maternity hospitals, transforming into an open resuscitation system. It is also planned to purchase 110 intensive care incubators with scales and pulse oximeter for hospitals. Deliveries will be completed by the end of 2023.
A premature baby spends the first two to four weeks in cuvez, depending on the term of gestation. But if the child is born at a time of less than 30 weeks, then, as a rule, he is in the cuvez at least until the one and a half kilogram weight and the gestation period is 32 weeks or more, when the child can be placed in open resuscitation systems, said the head physician of the children's Morozov hospital, the chief neonatologist of Moscow Valery Gorev.[1]