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Institution

Mulago Hospital

HealthcareKampala, 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.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Duke University Medical Center and New Mulago Hospital in Uganda applied a two-pronged twinning approach that placed usable surplus equipment in a developing country’s National Hospital, combined with dedicated comprehensive surgical training camps, to build capacity.
Abstract: Neurosurgical capacity is extremely deficient in East African countries where 27 neurosurgeons serve more than 250 million people. To build capacity, the Duke University Medical Center and New Mulago Hospital in Uganda applied a two-pronged twinning approach that placed usable surplus equipment in a developing country’s National Hospital, combined with dedicated comprehensive surgical training camps. Neurosurgery, anesthesiology, nursing, and clinical engineering personnel supported three training camps. More than 21 tons of essential equipment was delivered to New Mulago Hospital in Uganda. Data was collected during the 2-year period preceding and following the initiation of the program. During the 2 years after the program began, neurosurgery demonstrated a significant increase (180%) in the number and complexity of cases performed (p 0.1), but there was a dramatic increase in the overall number of procedures performed by all surgical specialties (106%, p < 0.0001). Through a twinning program combining delivery of surplus equipment and training camps, capacity building was accomplished and maintained. The program not only built overall surgical capacity, it improved the efficiency and increased the complexity of operative cases performed at the National Hospital in Uganda. This program could serve as a model for twinning, capacity building, and training in other developing countries where surgical disparities are among the greatest.

109 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Marcelle Geber1
TL;DR: In this article, the Psycho-Motor Development of African Children in the First Year, and the Influence of Maternal Behavior were discussed. But they focused on the first year of the child's life.
Abstract: (1958). The Psycho-Motor Development of African Children in the First Year, and the Influence of Maternal Behavior. The Journal of Social Psychology: Vol. 47, No. 2, pp. 185-195.

108 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The paper identifies the strengths of the approaches represented in each narrative and recommend these are brought together in the development of a flexible framework to help qualitative researchers to define, apply and demonstrate principles of quality in their research.
Abstract: Increasing demand for qualitative research within global health has emerged alongside increasing demand for demonstration of quality of research, in line with the evidence-based model of medicine. In quantitative health sciences research, in particular clinical trials, there exist clear and widely-recognised guidelines for conducting quality assurance of research. However, no comparable guidelines exist for qualitative research and although there are long-standing debates on what constitutes 'quality' in qualitative research, the concept of 'quality assurance' has not been explored widely. In acknowledgement of this gap, we sought to review discourses around quality assurance of qualitative research, as a first step towards developing guidance. A range of databases, journals and grey literature sources were searched, and papers were included if they explicitly addressed quality assurance within a qualitative paradigm. A meta-narrative approach was used to review and synthesise the literature. Among the 37 papers included in the review, two dominant narratives were interpreted from the literature, reflecting contrasting approaches to quality assurance. The first focuses on demonstrating quality within research outputs; the second focuses on principles for quality practice throughout the research process. The second narrative appears to offer an approach to quality assurance that befits the values of qualitative research, emphasising the need to consider quality throughout the research process. The paper identifies the strengths of the approaches represented in each narrative and recommend these are brought together in the development of a flexible framework to help qualitative researchers to define, apply and demonstrate principles of quality in their research.

104 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Staphylococcus aureus predominates the aetiology of neonatal septicaemia followed by E.coli, and hypoglycaemia is significantly associated with death.
Abstract: Background : Neonatal septicaemia remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality. The aetiology, risk factors and outcome of this problem need to understood. Objective : To determine the aetiology, risk factors and immediate outcome of bacteriologically confirmed neonatal septicaemia in Mulago hospital. Methods : Blood cultures were aseptically obtained from neonates presenting with clinical sepsis by WHO criteria to Mulago during a five month period between July and November 2002. Blood was placed in Brain Heart Infusion media and incubated within 30 minutes. Subcultures were plated daily up to 7 days on blood, chocolate and MacConkey agar and incubated in aerobic and 5% carbon dioxide conditions. Pure colonies were identified by Gram stain and biochemical tests and antibiotic sensitivities were obtained. Results : Gram positive organisms were predominant (69.2%) followed by E. coli (17%) and Group B Streptococci (GBS) (7%). Staphylococcus aureus and E. coli dominated isolates in early and late onset sepsis. S. aureus was more sensitive to gentamicin than to cloxacillin. The sensitivity of E. coli to ceftriaxone was 94.1%. Factors significantly associated with neonatal septicaemia were male sex, history of convulsions, hypoglycaemia, lack of antenatal care, late onset sepsis and umbilical pus discharge. Mortality in sepsis cases was 18.1%, and 84% of deaths occurred in the first 2 days of admission. Hypoglycaemia was significantly associated with death (p Conclusion : S. aureus predominates the aetiology of neonatal septicaemia followed by E.coli . Most deaths occur in the first 48 hours of admission and hypoglycaemia is significantly associated with death. African Health Sciences Vol. 6(2) 2006: 120-126

104 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Prevalence of sickle cell trait and disease were high in Uganda, with notable variation between regions and districts, which is consistent with comorbidity and early mortality.

102 citations


Authors

Showing all 545 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Moses R. Kamya6043512598
Jordan J. Feld5727713444
Eloi Marijon4735210005
Sarah G. Staedke471696095
Harriet Mayanja-Kizza432216804
Alphonse Okwera42885187
Joo-Hyun Nam412317216
James K Tumwine412145413
Ian Crozier401427922
Cissy Kityo391965926
Philippa Musoke371387778
Andrew Kambugu361845195
Denis Burkitt35738491
Richard Idro351394312
Robert O. Opoka331704927
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20223
202131
202027
201929
201822
201729