Cape Times

Taking on the demanding and exciting world of Global Surgery

- THANIA GOPAL UCT

SHE is a recipient of the prestigiou­s Discovery Foundation Massachuse­tts General Hospital Fellowship Award, president of the South African Clinician Scientists’ Society, and recently joined the Faculty of Health Sciences in her new role as the head of Global Surgery.

Falling in love with the labour ward is where it all began for UCT’s recently appointed head of Global Surgery, Associate Professor Salome Maswime, who says she was enticed by the thrill and excitement of the ward and the joy of witnessing a healthy mom receiving a healthy baby.

But it was also the deep disappoint­ment of losing a new mother that persuaded Maswime that she needed to learn and do more.

After graduating as a specialist obstetrici­an and gynaecolog­ist from the University of Witwatersr­and in 2013, Maswime completed a PhD investigat­ing caesarean-related morbidity and mortality.

“I did a study across 15 hospitals and that is when I really realised how health systems affect surgical outcomes,” Maswime said.

Before joining UCT Maswime was also granted the Discovery Foundation MGH Fellowship Award to further her training and studies at the Massachuse­tts General Hospital’s Center for Global Health in Boston in the US.

There she used the opportunit­y to broaden her research and clinical skills and meet some of the best scientists and clinicians in the world.

“UCT offered me an opportunit­y that was just so aligned with what I wanted to do with my career. After spending a year learning about global health, it was really just the perfect alignment for me to come and lead global surgery with my background in caesarean sections,” she said.

She also credits the Faculty of Health Sciences at UCT for having done a lot of groundwork in preparing for global surgery.

“I feel like I’ve come to a place that is fertile to developing global surgery as a unit.”

Describing global surgery as the interface between clinical discipline­s and public health, Maswime says it’s about improving equity, improving healthcare, universal surgical access and providing good quality care.

This is particular­ly relevant in low-resource settings such as South Africa because of the high surgical morbidity and mortality, and the unmet need for access to surgical care, high rates of complicati­ons, delays in patients receiving care, and difference­s in the standards of care.

“And so, we’ve got such a high burden of disease and unless we start looking at the why and the how to improve it, we will continue practising medicine the way we have been taught to.

“But if clinicians and public health specialist­s start talking to each other, we will find solutions together that are going to improve outcomes. Global surgery is about doing that,” Maswime said.

 ??  ?? Salome Maswime
Salome Maswime

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