This blog is dedicated to the growing practice of Emergency and Disaster medicine in Uganda. Our dream is the realization and growth of Emergency Medicine as a specialty and the improvement of Emergency medical care in Uganda. The team is composed of passionate Healthcare workers including Doctors, Nurses and other EM Enthusiasts with various levels of trainings.
Friday, 30 October 2015
Emergency Medicine Uganda: FWAAAAAH!!!
Emergency Medicine Uganda: FWAAAAAH!!!: A letter to the blog editor by a concerned Acute Care Advocate If you are Ugandan or know something about how we communicate, then you ...
FWAAAAAH!!!
A letter to the blog editor by a concerned Acute Care Advocate
If you are Ugandan or know something about how we communicate, then you
will understand why I have taken time to actually blog about this conversation.
If you are not familiar with some of our #SoUg (So Ugandan) words you will
definitely learn one here.
Definitions of Key
Words relevant to this post
The Author: An Emergency Medicine Registrar with a lot of Passion for Acute Care.
The Pharmacist: A Pharmacist with no knowledge of Acute Care.
Setting: A tertiary hospital in a country with no functional Acute Care system.
Emergency Medicine: IFEM
Definition of Emergency Medicine- Emergency
medicine is a field of practice based on the knowledge and skills required for
the prevention, diagnosis and management of acute and urgent aspects of illness
and injury affecting patients of all age groups with a full spectrum of
episodic undifferentiated physical and behavioural disorders; it further
encompasses an understanding of the development of prehospital and in hospital
emergency medical systems and the skills necessary for this development.
Fwaaah: So many contextual meanings ranging from diarrhea to
cosmic sounds made by the universe ( I just leaned this one). In Uganda,
however, it means to do something without any thought into what you are doing
carelessly and without any insight into the implications of your actions. The
more “A’s” in the word, the stronger the emphasis. So, Fwaaaaaah is worse that
Fwah!!
Sometime last week:
Cruising like I usually do in the corridors of Mulago (or any hospital
for that matter), I was stopped by someone calling me by my Surname!! That is official-implication: Must stop
immediately and respond!!
Pharmacist: Hello “Surname”
Me:
Hello (trying to flip through names and faces in my mind. No Results- but then
I am abit of an extrovert, will figure out name and place as we chat).
…then the usual Ugandan banter: too hot, too cold,
rainy, lost weight, gained weight, tired, too many sick people etc…
Pharmacist: So, what are you doing now?
Me:
With all the pride I can muster “Emergency Medicine!!””
Pharmacist: Clearly not impressed. What is that?
Me: Acute
Care medicine. I am training to be able to effectively manage all Emergencies
across all specialties in Medicine.
Pharmacist: scoffs!! Hmmm… Some of you people are now doing
Courses Fwaaaaaah!! How will that help us?
Me:
You must have never had an emergency or known someone with one? That is the
specialty that will change our health statistics!!
Pharmacist: well….. okay!! Clearly not convinced.
I have to run help with a patient in casualty so I cant stay long. On the way, I am furiously
flipping pages in my mind!!
·
Page
1: Advocacy
·
Page
2: Advocacy
·
Page
3: Advocacy
·
Page
……. ADVOCACY!!
I have spent a good number of hours since that conversation, finding out
what people think about the specialty of Emergency Medicine in Uganda.
In Part 2 of this Blog post, find out what Ugandans (Healthworkers and
the public) think about Acute Care in Our country.
On my part I believe Acute Care is the change that Uganda and Africa needs!!
It is what will change our Health statistics.
The Author is Affiliated with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine
Supporting Acute Care Across Africa
http://www.afem.info/
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)