by
Thomas Dworetzky, Contributing Reporter | April 21, 2016
It is perhaps a good thing that efforts are underway to repair, once again, the old machine. While Kenya's help for 400 patients is a welcome contribution, some Ugandan politicians are angered as more than 17,000 others will be unable to receive radiotherapy, according to Tuko.
“Every life matters. How can you tell people that they are going to die?" Muhammad Nsereko of Kampala Central told the online news service.

Ad Statistics
Times Displayed: 30157
Times Visited: 744 Stay up to date with the latest training to fix, troubleshoot, and maintain your critical care devices. GE HealthCare offers multiple training formats to empower teams and expand knowledge, saving you time and money
Dr. Chris Baryomunsi, the state's minister of health, contested this grim assessment. “These patients will first undergo assessment at the Mulago Hospital by our doctors to ensure that those who are badly off are the ones to benefit,” said Baryomunsi told CCTV-AFRICA according to Tuko, “Even when the machine was there then, people were dying because the machine is not a cure. However, I advise the other patients to go for palliative care or use strong painkillers such as morphine.”
As for the plan to get UCI's radiotherapy upgraded and online, Orem said, "I think the key process now, is to expedite the process of getting this new bunker in place. As I speak, today, we are doing the bid evaluation for the contractor. We have very good contractors – three of them – who have expressed interest.
"If we can get them on board and give them the funds that they need, and ask them to expedite the process, I am almost certain that within six months we should be able to have the construction completed. That leaves us with maybe the next six months to install the equipment, and then pretest. So within a year, if everything worked like a clock, we should be able to have the service restored or even taken beyond what we are now having."
AKUH-Nairobi has stepped up to provide such assistance to cancer patients before. Last year, it came to the aid of Kenyan cancer patients, including children, machines at Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi broke down. The private, not-for-profit AKUH-Nairobi has two radiotherapy units and six radiation oncologists.
Opened in 2011, the hospital offers a wide range of cancer care. For example, in 2014 and 2015, it conducted free health screening services at 446 camps for 136,000 people. At 135 of these, it provided cancer screening.
It is also the only hospital in East Africa accredited by the U.S.-based Joint Commission International.
In 2015, the facility and its 46 clinic network admitted over 1.3 million patient admissions and visits in 2015.
In 2012, approximately 645,000 new cancer cases and 456,000 cancer deaths occurred in Africa,
according to New Vision. The UCI, itself, handles about 44,000 patient days annually.
Back to HCB News