Institution
Mulago Hospital
Healthcare•Kampala, Uganda•
About: Mulago Hospital is a healthcare organization based out in Kampala, Uganda. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 542 authors who have published 545 publications receiving 34804 citations.
Topics: Population, Health care, Tuberculosis, Referral, Kwashiorkor
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The rate of clubfoot deformities in the newborn can be used to estimate the numbers of children who should be treated and to estimate resource needs for the identification and management of this treatable congenital malformation.
Abstract: Background: While the congenital clubfoot deformity is a common deformity recorded in Uganda, the incidence of the condition had never been accurately determined. The objective of this study was to measure the overall incidence of congenital clubfoot deformity in a representative sample of births. Methods: A study of all babies born with foot anomalies took place from March 2006 to October 2007. The study was based at 8 Regional Hospitals with active maternity units and a functioning clubfoot clinic. All babies with foot deformities at birth at any of eight centres as detected by the delivery room staff were referred to the respective centre’s clubfoot clinic. The children were examined by clubfoot clinic orthopedic officers who diagnosed the specific deformity. Children referred to the clinic from any source and born at the maternity unit were included in the study. The denominator was all live births at the centre during the study period. Results: The total number of live births during the study period was 110,336. The maternity units of the centres identified 290 infants with a foot deformity. One hundred and thirty infants born during the study period were diagnosed in the clubfoot clinic as having a congenital clubfoot deformity. The proportion of infants with a clubfoot deformity was 1.2 per 1000 births over the 20-month period. The male to female ratio was 2.4:1. Recommendation: The rate of clubfoot deformities in the newborn can be used to estimate the numbers of children who should be treated and to estimate resource needs for the identification and management of this treatable congenital malformation. By comparing the number of those treated with the expected number of cases, the numbers of children with neglected clubfoot can be calculated. Key words: Clubfoot; incidence; gender ratio
14 citations
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TL;DR: The electronic hospital-based TBI registry in Uganda will open the opportunity to replicate the process in other similar context and contribute to a better understanding of TBI in these settings, and feed into the global agenda of reducing deaths and disabilities in low-and middle-income countries.
Abstract: Lack of data on traumatic brain injuries (TBI) hinders the appreciation of the true magnitude of the TBI burden. This paper describes a scientific approach for hospital based systematic data collection in a low-income country. The registry is based on the evaluation framework for injury surveillance systems which comprises a four-step approach: (1) identifying characteristics that assess a surveillance system, (2) review of the identified variables based on adopted specific, measurable, assignable, realistic, and time-related criteria, (3) assessment of the proposed variables and system characteristics by an expert panel, and (4) development and application of a rating system. The electronic hospital-based TBI registry is designed through a collaborative approach to capture comprehensive, yet context specific, information on each TBI case, from the time of injury until death or discharge from the hospital. It includes patients’ demographics, pre-hospital and hospital assessment and care, TBI causes, injury severity, and patient outcomes. The registry in Uganda will open the opportunity to replicate the process in other similar context and contribute to a better understanding of TBI in these settings, and feed into the global agenda of reducing deaths and disabilities from TBI in low-and middle-income countries.
14 citations
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TL;DR: The positive aspects of the current projects, the various factors that hinder growth in this area, and what can be done to promote CHD service growth in these countries are explored.
Abstract: Congenital Heart Disease (CHD) is an enormous problem in Low Middle Income Countries and particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. There is an estimated 500,000 children born in Africa with CHD each year with a major proportion of this in sub-Saharan Africa. The vast majority of these children receive sub-optimal or no care at all. In East Africa: Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda have all attempted to create a CHD service for the last 20 years with minimal success due to various factors. Visiting cardiac missions have made considerable contributions in the development of CHD services in these countries, however there remains a significant number of children with lack of care. We explore the positive aspects of the current projects, the various factors that hinder growth in this area, and what can be done to promote CHD service growth in these countries.
14 citations
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14 citations
Authors
Showing all 545 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Moses R. Kamya | 60 | 435 | 12598 |
Jordan J. Feld | 57 | 277 | 13444 |
Eloi Marijon | 47 | 352 | 10005 |
Sarah G. Staedke | 47 | 169 | 6095 |
Harriet Mayanja-Kizza | 43 | 221 | 6804 |
Alphonse Okwera | 42 | 88 | 5187 |
Joo-Hyun Nam | 41 | 231 | 7216 |
James K Tumwine | 41 | 214 | 5413 |
Ian Crozier | 40 | 142 | 7922 |
Cissy Kityo | 39 | 196 | 5926 |
Philippa Musoke | 37 | 138 | 7778 |
Andrew Kambugu | 36 | 184 | 5195 |
Denis Burkitt | 35 | 73 | 8491 |
Richard Idro | 35 | 139 | 4312 |
Robert O. Opoka | 33 | 170 | 4927 |