By Steven Kisingiri | Country Director
Dr. Kenneth Daniel Bagonza – Emergency Medicine Physician
In a country of 42 million people, there are currently only seven emergency medicine (EM) physicians. Dr. Bagonza - one of the seven - works as a lecturer at Mbarara University of Science and Technology (MUST) and by proxy at Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital. Dr. Bagonza, who, as part of the masters in Emergency Medicine pioneer class, was among those retained by the university to provide clinical care in the hospital while training the next generation of emergency care professionals.
“Our biggest challenge is the lack of understanding of what emergency care is and what is required for whatever kind of emergency,” he notes. With over 3,250 Ugandans dead - including doctors - resulting from Covid-19 complications, there is a sudden urgency to increase the number of emergency care specialists in Uganda. It was clear that most specialties are not available 24 hours, yet emergencies happen at any time. “The unpredictability of emergencies requires that there must be someone with the right skills and numbers to attend to those emergences ably,” Dr. Bagonza says.
During the Covid-19 pandemic, trained emergency care providers were among the frontline teams dealing with life-threatening issues, bridging the gap between those who required acute care and the handover to the general ward. “The ones who had the best chance of survival are the ones who were provided with that opportunity to be kept alive… Some ailments are so acute that if you don’t catch them in time, then you deny these people a chance to life.” he says.
Dr. Bagonza desires to see that emergency medical care is available at all hospitals with a system that can pick the most vulnerable from their homes to the hospital emergency rooms while promptly providing pre-hospital service. “Ours is a very short interaction but potentially life-saving. And when you make these small but critical changes, they contribute to significant improvement…that is satisfying,”
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