State of the art midwifery equipment in Portsmouth vs back to basics care on your elective!

Tuesday, February 28th, 2012

RCM reported today that the redevelopment at Bournemouth University’s midwifery campus in Portsmouth boasts the latest training equipment and high-tech audio-visual kit. Professor Gail Thomas, midwife and dean of health at the university, commented

Midwife 05 150x150 State of the art midwifery equipment in Portsmouth vs back to basics care on your elective!

New facilities at Bournemouth!

‘The developments at Portsmouth will enhance the experience of our east-based student midwives, providing them with high quality skills laboratories, lecture and seminar rooms and general learning space……the skills room contains a birthing bed, costing over £7000, a birthing couch, a profiling bed and a Resuscitaire, costing about £8500.’

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Top 10 … reasons why our Intensive Spanish Course is the best!

Monday, January 23rd, 2012
1. From basic to proficient in one week – our course starts with the basics and progresses to include medical terminology. This will really help you in a hospital environment.

DSC05324 150x150 Top 10 ... reasons why our Intensive Spanish Course is the best!

Learning Spanish helps you translate menus

2. Focus on your discipline – We make sure our teachers in Mendoza and Arequipa know each student’s clinical interests before you even fly out to your destination. By the time you start, they will have developed specific material that will help you learn the terminology needed for your placement.

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NHS midwifery skills fade …. can we learn from Tanzania’s delivery rooms?

Thursday, January 5th, 2012

When I embarked on my midwifery elective to Dar Es Salaam, I was unsure as to how it would apply to my current practice within the NHS in England. What I was sure of was that it would be an eye-opening experience. In fact when I stepped into the hospital on the first day I realised that even this was a huge understatement – it was under resourced, struggling with funding and had huge cultural differences.

Abby 2009 4 150x150 NHS midwifery skills fade .... can we learn from Tanzanias delivery rooms?

Maternity practices are very different

Southampton, the city in which I am a studying,  has a growing population of ethnic minorities and I’ve found that we are caring for more and more  African women within the maternity service. I was keen to learn more about the cultural practices around pregnancy and childbirth so that I could feel more prepared to care for them.

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Argentina: Call for National Law to Reduce Maternal and Infant Mortality

Thursday, October 27th, 2011

The Argentine Alliance for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (Asumen) submitted the results of a survey on Maternal and Child Health carried out during the months of August and September.

Each year, more than 400 women and more than 9,200 children under one year die in Argentina. Out of these, 70% of maternal deaths and 60% of children’s deaths could be prevented through the implementation of effective health policies.

As a central strategy to reduce maternal and infant mortality nationally, the Argentine Alliance for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health mentioned the need of creation of a National Health Act that should coordinate the nation together with its provinces and municipalities. The act should apply both to Social Security and well as within the private sector. It should put an end to the current fragmentation of the health system, thus achieving a more effective funding and allocation of resources.

The survey results showed a total agreement of the need to reduce maternal and infant mortality through: (more…)

A typical day on placement – Maternity in Mendoza

Thursday, October 27th, 2011

Wake up at 7.45. Leave the house 15 minutes later than I mean to. Catch the bus to the hospital. Walk past street vendors that sell tortitas and churros that I know are cheaper and tastier that the ones in the hospital but attempt to ignore it as I know I’m already late.

1 day old1 150x150 A typical day on placement   Maternity in Mendoza

Ward rounds in Argentina

Arrive at the ward to find all the residents busy preparing for the ward round. We are a team of all women (21 chicas) on a ward of all women patients and women nurses. I love it!

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What the one week intensive Spanish course is really like.

Friday, September 23rd, 2011

The first day on the Intensive Spanish Course was nice and easy. We had a quick orientation tour around the main streets and sights of Mendoza, followed by a light lunch at a quaint restaurant. In the evening, we hung out in the kitchen, cooking and eating (or finishing) the fresh empanadas and alfajores de maicena we had just made. This was going to be easy…. or so I thought!

The rest of the Spanish week was anything but ¨tranquilo¨….. roll out of bed at 8AM, 4 rigorous hours of Spanish with Inés, 30 minutes to change out of my pyjamas, and then an afternoon of excursions with Jose. True to its name, this was definitely an intensive Spanish week. But every moment of it was brilliant. Each day was completely different, with some days packed with more than one activity. And siestas didn’t count!  I could tell, at various points through any given day, that I was experiencing a moment that would be a fondly remembered memory for years to come.

Like my first tango class with Ana y Luis. I was dreading the lesson as I have never been particularly coordinated, and I hate dancing with a partner. But 5 minutes in and I was already in love with this dance. Since they don´t speak English, it was difficult to understand the technicalities of each step: ¨Where does my hand go? Why can´t I do that? I do what with my foot?¨ But because it´s such a physical and intuitive dance, the body language facilitates the Spanish, making the language barrier a non-issue. Ana y Luis will repeatedly tell you to feel, listen, and let your body speak to you. Cheesy, I know, but totally true. So just go with the flow!

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A typical day on a medical maternity placement in Mendoza

Thursday, September 22nd, 2011

Wake up at 7.45. Leave the house 15 minutes later than I mean to. Catch the bus to the hospital. Walk past street vendors that sell tortitas and churros that I know are cheaper and tastier that the ones in the hospital but attempt to ignore it as I know I’m already late.

Arrive at the ward to find all the residents busy preparing for the ward round. We are a team of all women (21 chicas) on a ward of all women patients and women nurses. I love it!

IMG 1743 150x150 A typical day on a medical maternity placement in Mendoza

newborn

Come 9AM, no ward round. 9.30AM, still no ward round. 9.50AM and the consultant strolls into the doctors’ room to have a cigarette before he starts the ward round.

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Programme Manager Freddy joins students on Arusha Village Experience.

Thursday, September 15th, 2011

So, I was lucky enough to go with some students and spend a week in Engaruka a village in the heart of Maasai land! Engaruka is really rural Tanzania and is very different from life in a busy city like Arusha. There is no mobile phone signal in or around the village, so it is quite daunting to switch off the mobile for one full week, and definitely feels strange to be without modern comforts.

To travel to Engaruka, we took the taxi from the house which takes about fifteen minutes to the Arusha local bus, we took the bus from there to Engaruka via Mto wa Mbu (Arusha to Mto wa Mbu is about 3hrs) which was very busy and dusty, but definitely interesting and typically African. After stopping at Mto Wa Mbu (Mosquito River) for some food and drink for two hours, the bus turns off the main road into the wilderness across the Rift Valley, and you suddenly realise just how rural the village experience is going to be. The journey, although long and very bumpy is a fantastic introduction to Maasai life, as you see wild animals like grant gazelle, zebras and giraffes passing the bus and lots of Maasai in traditional dress. Don’t be surprise to see driver tie the goat on top of the bus; just remember you are in Africa – TIA!!

After arriving around 19:00 in the evening we were taken to our home for the week, which is a big change from the Work the World house in Arusha………no electricity, no signal, no internet  but the house is nice and clean and cosy. The beds are made of sticks with mattresses not like maasai bed which is made the same but with cow skin instead of mattresses, our beds are very comfortable – honestly!  The most important thing to say is that the Maasai are very friendly and welcoming, especially if you can learn a few words of Maasai and make the effort to communicate in their own language like “Takwenya” reply “Iko” or “Supai” reply “Ipa” all this means how are you and reply is fine.

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Why is maternal mortality in Argentina so high?

Tuesday, June 14th, 2011
Argentina has a maternal mortality rate three times higher than those of its neighbours Chile and Uruguay, and reports earlier this year suggest it is actually rising.
1 day old1 150x150 Why is maternal mortality in Argentina so high?

Abortions are illegal in Argentina

According to the Health Ministry statistics, deaths of healthy, young women from pregnancy-related causes rose from 44 per 100,000 live births in 2008 to 55 per 100,000 live births in 2009. In a country where 98% of women give birth in hospital, these figures are quite shocking.

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Traditional Birth Attendants – do they put African women at risk?

Thursday, June 9th, 2011

Throughout African history, traditional birth attendants (TBA’s) have provided maternity care for women despite having no formal training. Unicef figures show 1 in every 126 Tanzanian women dying due to maternity complications, and the story is the same in Ghana. Are women putting their lives at risk unnecessarily?

Alexandra Condron Arusha the first baby I have ever delivered whilst experiencing labour ward during my nursing placement 150x150 Traditional Birth Attendants – do they put African women at risk?

Deliveries in the hospital are safer

For many women, tradition and local customs prevent them attending hospital. For others it is the proximity to medical facilities – there is just no way they could reach a hospital in time to give birth. TBAs provide them with all the care they need, both during and after pregnancy and childbirth and there is no doubt they provide a much needed resource . The problem is that many of these TBAs inherit the job from their mothers or are simply respected older members of the community. In the majority of cases the women are illiterate and have learnt their skills from other TBAs or just through the course of their lives. They may consider themselves to be like private health practitioners, but can they spot complications or cope with problems any better than you or I?

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