
Morocco Opens 67 Health Centers Serving 3.6 Million People
Morocco just activated 67 new health facilities across six regions, bringing quality medical care closer to 3.6 million residents who previously had limited access. The centers are part of a nationwide plan to rehabilitate 1,400 health facilities and ensure every Moroccan can reach essential healthcare.
Over a million Moroccans woke up Friday with access to healthcare they didn't have the day before. Health Minister Amine Tehraoui launched 67 new health facilities across six regions, marking a major milestone in Morocco's mission to bring quality medical care to every corner of the nation.
The Casablanca-Settat region received the biggest boost with 18 new centers serving 1.09 million people. Nouaceur province alone activated five urban health centers, while nearby cities gained facilities offering everything from maternity services to tuberculosis diagnostics.
But the expansion reaches far beyond Morocco's urban centers. The Marrakech-Safi region launched 18 facilities across five provinces, with Al Haouz province gaining 11 new health establishments that will transform access for rural families.
Remote communities saw some of the most dramatic improvements. In the Guelmim-Oued Noun region, four rural facilities opened to serve areas where residents previously traveled hours for basic medical care.
Each center comes fully equipped with modern medical equipment and staffed by qualified professionals. The 67 facilities together employ 372 health workers who will provide general consultations, chronic disease monitoring, maternal and child health services, and mobile health units for the hardest-to-reach populations.

The Souss-Massa region activated nine centers serving nearly 857,000 residents, while Draa-Tafilalet gained 11 facilities. Every province received centers tailored to local needs, whether urban clinics in bustling Agadir or rural dispensaries in mountain communities.
The Ripple Effect
These 67 centers represent just the beginning of Morocco's healthcare transformation. The government's plan to rehabilitate 1,400 health facilities nationwide signals a commitment to making quality healthcare a reality rather than a privilege.
For families in rural Al Haouz or remote Guelmim-Oued Noun, the impact goes beyond medical care. Parents no longer choose between a day's wages and getting their child checked for a fever. Pregnant women can access prenatal care without dangerous travel. Diabetics can monitor their condition regularly instead of waiting until emergencies strike.
The facilities also create economic opportunity, bringing hundreds of healthcare jobs to underserved regions and building infrastructure that attracts further investment.
When healthcare comes to the people instead of forcing people to travel for healthcare, entire communities grow stronger, healthier, and more hopeful about the future.
Based on reporting by Morocco World News
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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