elective report 2013

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GULU UNIVERSITY FACULTY OF MEDICINE DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH FOURTH YEAR ELECTIVE PROGRAM JUNE - AUGUST 2013 KITGUM GENERAL GOVERNMENT HOSPITAL NORTHERN UGANDA Student Mr TURYASIIMA MUNANURA (TMK) [email protected] or [email protected] …………………………………… Site Supervisors Dr OKELLO GEOFREY Dr AKENA GEOFREY ………………………………………………. ……………………………………………....

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Page 1: Elective report 2013

GULU UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF MEDICINE

DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH

FOURTH YEAR ELECTIVE PROGRAM

JUNE - AUGUST 2013

KITGUM GENERAL GOVERNMENT HOSPITAL

NORTHERN UGANDA

Student

Mr TURYASIIMA MUNANURA (TMK)

[email protected] or

[email protected]

……………………………………

Site Supervisors

Dr OKELLO GEOFREY

Dr AKENA GEOFREY

……………………………………………….

……………………………………………....

Page 2: Elective report 2013

My medical elective was undertaken at Kitgum General Hospital (KGH). KGH is a

government hospital set in Kitgum City of Northern Uganda, and with this comes a

very different spectrum of patients compared with Gulu University Teaching

Hospital.

The Hospital has 6 main units that students can be involved in: Female and Male

medical and surgical units, Paediatrics and Maternity. There is also a TB ward,

Outpatients department, Community team, Physiotherapy department, Rehabilitation

and nutrition department and the HIV/AIDS programme to keep you busy!

There is a doctor or senior clinical officer based on each of the main units that

students can attach themselves to. They are all keen for you to be involved and

become part of the team. The average day varies depending on which doctor you are

with but generally it begins with ward rounds at 8:00am. This is followed by break tea

at 10:15am finishing around 11:00am. Then it is the clinicians’ time to disperse again

to their various departments where patients are reviewed, treated or admitted

according to their clinical presentation.

Lunch is a personal business, so everyone gets lunch at their own time and

convenience within or outside the hospital between 1pm and 2pm. There are a variety

of restaurants and hotels that are pocket friendly around the town for one to quench

their thirst.

Page 3: Elective report 2013

In the afternoon students continue to work on the wards, join one of the other

departments or do community visits for STI tutoring, AIDS counselling and

immunisations. The evenings are a time for relaxation, football, clubbing, playing lots

of cards or seeing friends! At the weekends there are opportunities to explore Kitgum

or neighbouring villages and towns.

I have had the most wonderful time here in Kitgum. The staff and nursing students

from the nearby nursing school make you feel very welcome. Most of the patients

speak the local language “Acholi” and the nursing students are excellent at helping

you get through the language barrier, (although translating some systemic

examination through a translator is fun!!)

My time here has challenged me medically, personally and socially. My medical skills

have greatly improved and confidence in my abilities, although sometimes shaken, is

now much stronger. The senior staff are always on hand to offer advice and help with

any decisions, but one of the more enjoyable things is that you have far more

autonomy than a medical student would at our teaching Hospitals Gulu Regional

Referral or Lacor (even if this can be daunting at times!) There is also plenty of

opportunity to increase your portfolio of skills such as an Orthopaedic department,

minor/major surgeries, cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and building

management plans.

My colleague reviewing

patients during a general ward

round on the Paediatrics ward.

The common conditions are

malaria and respiratory tract

infections (RTIs); however i

noticed marked number of

sickle cell disease (SCD)

which is not the case in Gulu.

Hospital.

Page 4: Elective report 2013

Personally my time here has led me to reflect on my attitudes and interactions with

those around me. The language and cultural differences have made me far more

patient and compassionate with the people i meet and have come to learn that people

in the north are good and caring to strangers.

There have been some difficult times as well as fun times. I had never seen a cases of

gender based violence (GBV) before in Gulu and yet here, sadly this is too frequent

an occurrence. I got a woman who was beat to death by the husband because he was

drunk. He beat the woman and fractured all the arm bones (radius and ulna).

I have also had to cope with the poverty and problems with which so many of my

patients and their families go through. However, the graciousness with which they

tackle their difficulties and the happiness they find in the small things is very

humbling and wonderful to see.

My elective was an extremely enjoyable and educational experience. I feel that I have

learnt a lot about medicine, but also a lot about myself. I have experienced not only a

different health care system but also a different culture and way of life. I feel this has

broadened my horizons and made me more knowledgeable about the world.

As a doctor to be I will meet people from all over the World and my experiences on

my elective have met my appetite for this opportunity.

Tmk@gulu 2013

+256 776 505 193

Aciro sustained fracture injuries on

both arms when she was assaulted

by her husband (GBV) who was

drunk. We put her on POP since

she could not afford referral to a

nearby Orthopaedic centre because

of poverty.