Westover family rebuild Paradiso to honour Michael.

Monday, November 14th, 2011

A Canadian newspaper – The St Albert Gazette – has published an article about a family who chose Work the World to help them honour their son.

IMG 2808 150x150 Westover family rebuild Paradiso to honour Michael.

Climbing Kili!

Michael Westover was a medical student who was killed in a vehicle crash last year. To commemorate his life his sister Rachelle, a third year medical student, his fiance Keisha, an operating room nurse, his cousin Aryll, an ER nurse and his sister Chayne, a nursing student, decided to travel to Africa and use their medical skills.

IMG 0967 150x150 Westover family rebuild Paradiso to honour Michael.

Village experience

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The benefits of doing your elective overseas

Saturday, October 29th, 2011

Should you wish to combine travelling with education, there’s really no better alternative than an elective placement abroad. Having now arrived back home after 5 weeks in Ghana I admit that I’ve already started planning where to spend next summer. This may give you the impression that I’m an organized person. You’d be wrong. Impatient would probably be more accurate!

Abby 2009 6 150x150 The benefits of doing your elective overseas

Nurses get involved with Doctors on ward rounds in Ghana

Travelling to other countries broadens horizons and experiencing new cultures, food, languages and climates all form a part of this. That sounds like a standard cliché. And it is, sorry. But as a student on a healthcare elective, you will gain a unique perspective of a country which many other tourists and travellers will never see.  It’s almost like an insider’s view of the country and you will learn things which the guidebooks will be ignorant of and see things which no documentary will show. Afternoons spent visiting a psychiatric hospital and hospital mortuary while in Ghana spring to mind. Countless issues will crop up while on placement that will give you a very real sense of the culture of the country. These may be attitudes to death and bereavement, mental health or the degree of poverty that people are contending with. Sometimes even simply listening to a patient’s history will reinforce in your mind how poor the people are. For example, while on the village placement in Ghana, a man arrived at the clinic early one morning after being bitten while he was hunting for rats and other bush meat. Again, it’s a little insight into daily life that most tourists wouldn’t have. I should probably say at this point that at no point in the village experience in Ghana will you be expected to hunt for your food. Or eat a rat for that matter.

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Student medic reflects on how an overseas elective can impact upon your future career

Sunday, September 4th, 2011

When planning your elective it is easy to get swept up in the excitement of foreign travel; the anticipation of new experiences, new friends, new tastes, smells and sights. Amongst all this it can be easy to forget the real reason that you are going on your elective in the first place.

It can also be difficult to visualise the impact that your elective will have on the rest of your career, particularly if, like me, your elective comes relatively early on in your medical school career. It wasn’t until a year or so after I got back, when I sat down to think about the MTAS form and FY1 postings, that I really thought through what my experiences in Tanzania had taught me, how this might affect my future practice and how this might benefit my career.

DSC 0377 150x150 Student medic reflects on how an overseas elective can impact upon your future career

Delivering a baby

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The weekly question – Why did you choose to do your placement in the destination you’re in?

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

We think that one of the hardest parts of organising an elective is actually deciding where to go. Whether you’re tempted by the tribes of Africa; the mountains of Asia or the flavour of South America, wherever you decide to go, your elective overseas will no doubt enrich both your professional and personal development in a safe, supported environment.

We currently work in seven locations around the world and like to talk to students in depth about each destination before they make a decision – this way they can work out which placement is most suited to them. So the question we chose to ask the houses this week is “Why did you choose to do your placement in the destination you’re in?”

Abby 2011 2 150x150 The weekly question   Why did you choose to do your placement in the destination you’re in?

A Sri Lankan beach

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The Weekly Question – Were you nervous about travelling overseas for your placement? How did you conquer your fears and what advice can you give to future students?

Thursday, August 18th, 2011

Students are often slightly anxious about travelling overseas for their placements, particularly on their own.  So this week we’re asking the students in Africa, Asia and South America, “Were you nervous about travelling overseas for your placement? How did you conquer your fears and what advice can you give to future students?”

drinking blood1 150x150 The Weekly Question   Were you nervous about travelling overseas for your placement? How did you conquer your fears and what advice can you give to future students?

Preparing the goat!

Arryl travelled to Arusha all the way from Canada “Before leaving for my elective, my circulating thoughts covered every emotion: excitement, fear, concern, and yearning. I was about to travel eighteen hours to the continent Africa. Needless to say, I settled in so quickly! The only advice I wish to leave you with is to go with an open (and un-judgemental mind) and literally jump, leap, and bound to these amazing opportunities that await you. This is more than a medical placement; this is a life changing opportunity and one that can forever impact your future. Do anything and everything you can, from climbing a mountain, to eating raw goat kidney. Your Tanzanian life awaits you. Have fun, play safe. And remember, this is Africa.”

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The Weekly Question – What is the most interesting piece of local curiosity or handicraft that you have seen and tell us a bit about it

Friday, July 15th, 2011

We know that students love to travel at the weekend and often find fantastic souvenirs or witness fascinating ceremonies. This week we are asking the students “what is the most interesting piece of local curiosity or handicraft that you have seen and tell us a bit about it.”

Alison April 10 210 150x150 The Weekly Question   What is the most interesting piece of local curiosity or handicraft that you have seen and tell us a bit about it

Kandy centre

Sri Lanka is a treasure trove of exotic delights and crafts you can take home with you. Jan and Rebecca, 3rd year Midwifery students from New Zealand have packed their cases full of pashminas and tell us that the “batiks look really cool, they are great for wall hangings and cushions. But make sure you barter hard for them and buy them of the central market and not Queen’s Hotel shop. The pashminas are really beautiful and good quality. Once again barter. Pay no more than Rs.650 for the plain and Rs. 1100 for the patterned.

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Students don’t wash your socks – it keeps the mozzies away!

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

Scientists in Tanzania are developing a new trap for malaria-spreading mosquitoes, using the smell of human feet as a lure.

They came up with the idea when they realised lots of mosquitoes were particularly drawn to smelly socks. As an experiment they persuaded volunteers to donate their stinky footwear and then placed them in canvas and wooden boxes hung with insecticide-laced drapes outside peoples homes in Tanzania.

As mosquitoes work through smell rather than sight, they can’t tell the difference between the trap and real humans before it is too late. It seems the traps attracted up to four times as many mosquitoes as humans themselves and 74-95% of those mosquitoes that landed were killed.

Malaria is one of the biggest killers in the developing world. Each year, there are almost 250 million new cases of malaria and almost 800,000 people – mostly children under five and pregnant women – die, according to the World Health Organisation. A reduction in the number of mosquitoes would drastically reduce the transmission rate.

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Unicef signs the first UN Development Assistance plan in Tanzania

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

Unicef joins other agencies to sign the first UN Development Assitance Plan.

The Plan, covering the period 2011-2015, outlines the areas where all the UN agencies will work together to support the priorities of the government as outlined in the National Poverty Reduction Strategies of Mainland Tanzania and the island of Zanzibar.

The plan aligns the work of the UN agencies around 10 programmes including Health and Nutrition, Education, Social Protection, HIV and AIDS, Water, Hygiene and Sanitation (WASH), Emergencies, Governance, Economic Growth, Environment and Refugees.

The reform aims to ensure more efficient and effective development operations – with one programme, one budgetary framework and an enhanced role for the UN Resident Coordinator.

Screening for syphilis in Tanzania could save lives.

Thursday, June 30th, 2011
The BBC have reported that hundreds of thousands of babies’ lives could be saved each year if pregnant women were screened for syphilis.
Twins I helped deliver 150x150 Screening for syphilis in Tanzania could save lives.

Congenital syphilis screenings rarely take place

The disease causes 500,000 stillbirths and newborn deaths globally, but the majority of these are in  Africa. This figure was backed up by a study published in the Lancet Infectious Diseases. A study of 41,000 women showed that testing and antibiotics could more than halve the number of deaths – something that could be cheap and cost-effective to put in place.

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The weekly question – what is the best mode of money to take overseas?

Monday, June 27th, 2011

One of the most common questions we still get from students in the run up to their elective is “what is the best mode of money to take overseas with me?” It used to be the case that traveller’s cheques and local currency were all you could take but times have changed and managing your money overseas is easier and safer than ever.

All of our placements are located in colourful and bustling destinations where ATMs are easily accessible. We always take you out on your first day for an extensive orientation of the local area so you know exactly where to find the banks, internet cafes and all the other travel essentials.

There is lots of information and suggestions available for each student in the downloadable info pack on My Trip, but there is nothing like getting answers firsthand from students to put the mind at ease!

So this week we asked our students overseas “What is the best mode of money to take with overseas? US dollars? travellers cheques? bank card? english money?

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