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Home > Headlines > Inside UM6P’s Smart Health Care City: A New Model for Moroccan Hospital Medicine

Inside UM6P’s Smart Health Care City: A New Model for Moroccan Hospital Medicine

For the Rhamna province, historically starved of specialist care and tethered to referral corridors leading to Marrakech and Casablanca, the SHCC represents the first locally anchored alternative.

Adil FaouzibyAdil Faouzi
May, 19, 2026
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Spread across more than 70,000 square meters of built infrastructure, the teaching hospital operates at a cruising capacity of 400 beds distributed across three complementary poles: a general hospital, a rehabilitation center, and a geriatrics center.

Spread across more than 70,000 square meters of built infrastructure, the teaching hospital operates at a cruising capacity of 400 beds distributed across three complementary poles: a general hospital, a rehabilitation center, and a geriatrics center.

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Benguerir – Mohammed VI Polytechnic University (UM6P) has crossed a decisive threshold in its bid to stake a claim at the frontier of Moroccan healthcare, formally consolidating the operational architecture of its Smart Health Care City (SHCC). The sprawling campus-based ecosystem fuses medical education, translational research, clinical care, and biotechnology under a single institutional canopy.

Morocco World News (MWN) visited the hub on Tuesday, witnessing first-hand how the integrated health platform positions UM6P’s teaching hospital as a facility that has moved well beyond the proof-of-concept stage. More than 10,000 patients have already been treated through consultations, hospitalizations, surgical interventions, and specialized medical procedures since the facility’s initial operational phases began.

Rachid El Fatimy, who serves as Dean of the Faculty of Medical Sciences (FMS) and oversees the broader health cluster at UM6P’s Benguerir campus, framed the undertaking in ecosystem terms rather than institutional ones. “What we are developing is an ecosystem,” he told MWN. “More than only one division.” The project encompasses “education, research, care, and biotechnology,” he detailed.

 

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Spread across more than 70,000 square meters of built infrastructure, the teaching hospital operates at a cruising capacity of 400 beds distributed across three complementary poles: a general hospital, a rehabilitation center, and a geriatrics center. Its technical platform – built to next-generation specifications – includes a 3-Tesla MRI unit, a 128-slice CT scanner with a cardiology module, a PHENO hybrid operating room, a BrainLab Loop X mobile scanner, and eight operating theaters equipped for minimally invasive and robotic surgery meeting ISO 5 and ISO 7 standards.

A fully robotized hospital pharmacy with a secured dispensation circuit, a medical biology platform, and a dedicated medical genetics and genomics service complete the clinical backbone. The facility houses more than 7,000 pieces of medical equipment, including a Panoramic 1000 3DHISTECH digital scanner and a biplane catheterization room for interventional cardiology.

The care pathways currently operational span emergency medicine, internal medicine, general surgery, obstetrics and gynecology, pulmonology, gastroenterology, interventional cardiology, infectious diseases, neurosurgery, ophthalmology, dermatology, oncology, and pediatrics, among other specialties.

Six designated Clinical Centers of Excellence – in geriatrics and healthy aging, polytrauma and burns, rehabilitation and sports medicine, metabolic diseases, cardiology, and neurology-neurosurgery – anchor the hospital’s ambition to function as a referral destination rather than a generalist facility. Diagnostic and interventional radiology round out what amounts to a full-spectrum clinical offering rare outside Morocco’s largest urban centers.

A rehabilitation and geriatrics apparatus built for demographic realities

Two structures embedded within the hospital complex address critical gaps in Morocco’s evolving epidemiological profile. The rehabilitation center delivers functional recovery services, neurological rehabilitation, and high-performance sports medicine – including a hyperbaric oxygen chamber, a cryotherapy unit operating at minus 110 degrees Celsius, balneotherapy, a Lokomat robotic gait trainer, and stabilometry.

The geriatrics center is meanwhile configured around continuous, personalized care for aging-related pathologies and dependency – a domain that Morocco’s existing hospital infrastructure has historically underserved.

The dual emphasis on rehabilitation and geriatrics reflects a deliberate institutional wager. Morocco’s demographic transition – marked by the progression of chronic diseases, an aging population, and mounting demand for long-term follow-up care – has exposed structural deficits in specialized services, particularly outside Casablanca, Rabat, and Marrakech. The Rhamna province, where Benguerir is located, has long relied on referrals to those urban hubs for anything beyond primary care.

The hospital’s digital backbone is no afterthought. UM6P Hospitals operates a latest-generation Hospital Information System (SIH) that assigns each patient a unified digital identity upon admission, extracted automatically from their national ID card. Patients receive identification bracelets with barcodes or QR codes enabling traceability at every stage of the care pathway.

The pharmaceutical circuit is entirely electronic – prescriptions are integrated into the patient file with automated interaction and contraindication analysis, real-time alerts on sensitive dosages, and bedside administration via a double-scan protocol. The system adheres to international interoperability standards, including HL7 FHIR, DICOM, LOINC, and ICD-11.

A medical school engineered around the operating theater, not the amphitheater

The hospital does not exist in isolation from the classroom – it was designed as an extension of it. The FMS, which underpins the SHCC’s academic pillar, currently enrolls some 600 students across four programs: a six-year integrated Doctorate in Medicine, a Doctorate in Pharmacy, a Bachelor in Nursing, and a Bachelor in Kinesitherapy. An additional 255 students are expected by 2027.

More than 80 faculty members deliver a curriculum built around what El Fatimy described as a philosophy of total clinical immersion. “We are using learning by doing,” he told MWN. “Each time it’s possible to replace a classical course in the amphitheater, we are doing practical work.”

The medical and pharmacy programs have produced four cohorts to date, while nursing has graduated three. Students are embedded in hospital services from an early stage, supplemented by a simulation-based learning environment and structured exposure to research.

 

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Academic pathways can lead to dual degrees in medicine and sciences, and a PhD program offers doctoral candidates access to advanced research platforms with international co-supervision. Executive education rounds out the portfolio with specialized university diplomas in interventional radiology, endometriosis and adenomyosis, cytology, thyroid cytology, and animal experimentation.

El Fatimy cast research as central to every dimension of the project. “Research is the center of everything,” he confirmed. Sixty doctoral candidates are currently supervised, 90% of research projects are funded through competitive grants, and the SHCC’s publication trajectory has reached journals including Cell, Nature Communications, Science Advances, and the European Journal of Cancer – a footprint that few Moroccan medical faculties of any vintage can claim.

Where clinical investigation meets continental ambition

The university plans to progressively establish a Clinical Investigation Center (CIC) dedicated to structuring clinical research and therapeutic trials, with initial focus areas in neurosciences, metabolic diseases, and chronic pathologies. The stated objective is to conduct studies that meet international standards while integrating Moroccan and African patients into major biomedical research networks – a dimension that speaks to UM6P’s broader continental positioning.

Research domains already active at the SHCC span epidemiology and public health, molecular biology and immunology, neurosciences, biomaterials and drug delivery, and data science and artificial intelligence applied to health. The research center’s technological platforms include animal facilities, imaging infrastructure, sequencing capabilities, biochemistry labs, flow cytometry, and a biobank.

The staffing architecture reflects the scale of the operation. Some 535 personnel are currently deployed – nearly 80 specialist physicians, more than 354 paramedical professionals, and administrative and technical teams. The FMS ecosystem brings together clinicians, biologists, pharmacists, engineers, and doctoral researchers in what the university describes as a translational research approach connected to field realities.

El Fatimy conveyed cautious confidence about the trajectory. “We have some good news and good metrics that allow us to see that our proof of concept is starting to really work very well,” he said, adding that “we are growing every year.”

Sovereign healthcare in the kingdom’s reform calculus

The timing of the SHCC consolidation is not incidental. Morocco is in the midst of a generational overhaul of its social protection architecture, with the generalization of compulsory health insurance and the restructuring of the public hospital system at the center of the reform agenda. UM6P’s entry into the healthcare space – backed by OCP Group resources and institutional heft – adds a private-university dimension to a sector historically dominated by public CHUs and a fragmented private clinic landscape.

The SHCC’s broader campus includes the FMS, UM6P Hospitals, a Biotechnology Park, and a life sciences startup incubator – the latter running programs like IBTIKAR & WIKAYA for student entrepreneurs and REAS, a health R&D seed-funding initiative, both in collaboration with the OCP Foundation. El Fatimy described the ambition as aligned with royal vision, stressing that the objective is “to empower health” through an integrated model where education, research, care, and biotechnology converge.

Whether UM6P’s health ecosystem can scale beyond its current proof-of-concept phase into a replicable model for Morocco and the wider African continent remains the defining question. The infrastructure, the investment, and the institutional will are visibly in place. The metrics, as El Fatimy suggested, are beginning to speak for themselves.

Read also: UM6P’s Smart Green City Forum Charts a New Course for AI-Driven Urbanism in Africa

Tags: Healthcare in Africahealthcare in MoroccoMohammed VI Polytechnic University (UM6P)UM6P
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