

Mediheal
Group of Hospitals founder Dr Swarup Mishra
has insisted that no Kenyan kidney ever left the country and all foreign
patients arrived in Kenya with their own donors.
He spoke in
regards to questionable kidney transplants by the hospital.
“All foreign
transplant patients brought their own donors. No Kenyan organ has ever been
exported. Not even one,” he said.
“The medical
facility is not involved in donor selection, transaction, or any form of
influence, pressure, bribing, or commercialization. We do not even suggest
donors to patients.”
Dr Mishra
was responding to a damning report by a government-appointed taskforce that
investigated 476 kidney transplants conducted at Mediheal between 2018 and
2024.
The report
accused the hospital of violating transplant regulations and recommended
prosecution of Dr Mishra and three other senior doctors.
But Mishra
defended the integrity of the procedures and insisted that all transplant
surgeries at Mediheal followed the law and were authorised by the Ministry of
Health.
“Eligible candidates for renal transplant include patients referred by relatives or friends, and in-house kidney patients from our hospital,” he explained.
“A complete workup
is performed to confirm if a patient is a true candidate, because some cases
might be reversible dialysis.”
He further
noted that patients must bring their own donors, who then undergo rigorous
medical screening alongside the recipients.
“Once brought
by the patient, donors undergo a comprehensive workup to ensure compatibility,”
Mishra said.
“This
includes cross-matching, HLA typing, and gene mapping — which are essential to
minimize or eliminate post-transplant rejection.”
He presented
figures to support Mediheal’s performance: out of the 476 transplants, only 20
were rejected — far below the global average rejection rate of 20 per cent.
“Of the 20,
seven were acute and 13 were chronic,” he said.
“Eight cases
were successfully rescued, meaning only 12 transplants were ultimately
rejected. We have not lost a single donor. All donors are alive.”
He also
addressed transplant-related mortality.
“Patient
mortality for kidney transplants at our facility is 8 out of 476 cases,” he
said.
“We define transplant-related mortality as
death occurring within one month of surgery. Deaths occurring after two, three,
or ten years are natural and unrelated to the transplant.”
Dr Mishra
dismissed the taskforce report as malicious and lacking factual basis.
“This report
is harmful to the integrity of our hospital. The claims are entirely unfounded
and not supported by any credible evidence,” he said.
“We have nothing to hide. We remain committed
to ethical, safe, and world-class healthcare.”
He revealed
that Mediheal had issued a legal demand to German broadcaster Deutsche Welle
over what he termed false allegations in a documentary that prompted the
taskforce probe.
“We will
cooperate with all relevant authorities,” Dr Mishra said.
“And if any wrongdoing is found, we are ready
to face the consequences — but we reject the lies and defamation.”