Uganda
CURE's hospital in Mbale is transforming the lives of children with disabilities and their families in Uganda through medical and spiritual healing.
CURE's hospital in Mbale is transforming the lives of children with disabilities and their families in Uganda through medical and spiritual healing.
CURE Children’s Hospital of Uganda is a specialty teaching hospital that treats the neurosurgical needs of children, with an emphasis on hydrocephalus, neural tube defects, spina bifida, epilepsy and brain tumors. Located in Mbale, Uganda, it is Africa’s leading hospital for the treatment of these conditions.
Since it opened in 2000, more than 7,750 surgeries have been performed at the CURE Uganda hospital. This life-saving care is available nowhere else in Uganda and is available to all, regardless of ability to pay.
Children suffering from physical disabilities like hydrocephalus in Uganda have little hope for a productive future. If they don’t die, they will endure a lifetime of physical and mental problems as well as social isolation. Their families also often encounter similar rejection from their relatives and friends.
CURE Uganda is recognized as a global leader in the treatment of hydrocephalus. It developed and implemented a groundbreaking minimally invasive surgical procedure that serves as a superior alternative to the more traditional method of inserting a shunt inside the head.
The hospital’s prestigious International Program to Advance the Treatment of Hydrocephalus (iPATH) attracts neurosurgeons from all over the world, including countries like Bangladesh, the U.S. and Ghana. These surgeons spend three months at the hospital to learn the advanced surgery performed there and are then equipped to perform this surgery in their home country.
CURE Uganda has a holistic approach to its patient care, with an equal emphasis on physical and spiritual healing. The hospital has a highly trained team of counselors who are available to talk and pray with patients and their families.
To extend its reach beyond its central location, the hospital regularly sends out mobile clinics to remote areas of Uganda for follow-up care and to identify additional children for treatment.
Uganda is a landlocked country in East Africa. It is bordered on the east by Kenya, on the north by Sudan, on the west by the Democratic Republic of the Congo, on the southwest by Rwanda, and on the south by Tanzania. The southern part of the country includes a substantial portion of Lake Victoria, which is also bordered by Kenya and Tanzania.
Mbale, where CURE’s hospital is located, is a town in the eastern region of Uganda, at the foot of Mount Elgon. It is one of the nation's largest urban areas and the commercial center for a coffee-producing agricultural region.
Population: 29,899,000
Climate: Tropical
Nationality: Ugandan
Language: Ganda, English
Capital: Kampala
Percent population under age of 15: 50%
Years of life expectancy at birth: 49
Infant mortality (per 1000 live births): 63
Child mortality (death before age 5): 134
Per capital health expenditure: $143
Hydrocephalus is caused by an over-accumulation of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).Commonly referred to as “water on the brain,” this condition is caused by a blockage of the brain’s ventricles, leading to a disruption in the outflow of CSF. If left untreated, this condition can lead to significant physical and developmental problems and, more than half of the time, death.
Hydrocephalus is an enormous problem among infants in the developing world. Due to high birth rates, the lack of quality health care and tremendous poverty leading to issues such as malnutrition, the incidence of neonatal infection is higher in poor countries, which in turn leads to higher rates of hydrocephalus. In Uganda alone, over 2,000 new cases of hydrocephalus are reported each year.
Traditionally, children suffering from hydrocephalus are treated using a shunt system to drain the accumulated fluid off the brain and out of the body. The shunt procedure has been in use for well over 60 years; however, even in a developed setting, there is a 50 percent chance that the shunt will fail at some point in the life of the patient. Combined with their propensity for infection, shunts are not the best option for children living in the developing world.
CURE Children’s Hospital of Uganda utilizes an alternative noninvasive procedure for the treatment of this condition. Developed by the hospital’s former medical director, Dr. Benjamin Warf, this procedure combines an endoscopic third ventriculostomy (ETV) with a choroid plexus cauterization (CPC), to provide a safer, more sustainable solution than the use of a shunt.
More than 3,000 infants have been treated at the hospital using this procedure.
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