China Daily

Chinese doctors help improve Uganda’s healthcare status quo

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KAMPALA, Uganda — Healthcare provisions in Africa are one of the toughest hurdles that government­s have to contend with.

Many medical centers across the continent are constraine­d by a lack of medicine, personnel and equipment. In Uganda, a Chinese medical team together with their local counterpar­ts are determined to change the status quo.

One step at a time and with increased government support, the experts believe healthcare provisions in the east African country can improve.

In the acupunctur­e ward at China-Uganda Friendship Hospital located in the capital Kampala, there is no empty bed.

Patients line up outside the ward waiting for their treatment.

Inside the ward, 43-year-old Ni Wei is busy inserting acupunctur­e needles and carefully monitoring patients.

In a day, he works on close to 30 patients, many of whom come for pain relief.

Although the workload has been heavy, Ni has never turned town a patient. Many of them are referred from different parts of the country.

Jamila Nagawa, 34, said that she has been getting acupunctur­e sessions since January. Her vision was impaired due to an accident. After being treated at Mulago National Referral Hospital, she was sent to Ni for further treatment.

“I have slowly regained my eye sight,” Nagawa said.

Betty Jurua, 68, heard about acupunctur­e in her home area Arua, about 500 km northwest of Kampala.

“I had pain from my right hand caused by blood pressure. I tried everything but it failed,” she said. “Then I started getting acupunctur­e. I am now improving. I can now move and work.”

In the surgical ward, Yang Jun is preparing to carry out an operation while an intern briefs him on the progress in preparing the patient.

On average, surgeon Yang carries out about six operations a week and sees 40 to 60 patients in a weekly clinic.

He said although the workload is not heavy for him, most of the time is lost through translatio­n.

“Many local people do not speak English very well. I often spend extra time to communicat­e with them. The most important thing we care about is the patient,” he said. “The equipment here is not as good as in China. But we don’t care much about the circumstan­ces.”

Besides operations and diagnoses, Yang also has the responsibi­lity of training intern doctors that have been posted at the hospital.

Yang said the transfer of skills is one of the critical goals of the Chinese medical team. Training someone allows that person to train someone else, causing a ripple effect, he said.

Edward Kyomugisha, a senior consultant surgeon, said the Chinese medical teams have played an important role at the China-Uganda Friendship Hospital.

“The Chinese medical team is a great relief to the workforce here. We can afford to have five clinics for patients every week. Before, we used to have, like, two clinics a week. Each clinic is full of patients,” Kyomugisha said.

“Personally, I am not experience­d in laparoscop­y, but I am learning from the team.”

 ?? YUAN QING / XINHUA ?? A doctor from a Chinese medical team treats local patients at ahospital in Uganda in 2014.
YUAN QING / XINHUA A doctor from a Chinese medical team treats local patients at ahospital in Uganda in 2014.

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