Reflections

Sitting in Doha airport with a couple of hours to while away before I board for the final leg of my journey home I am reflecting on the last six weeks in Uganda. The maternity department has seen a flow of really difficult obstetric emergencies and I have encountered several situations I have never had…

Anna has her baby

Anna, the widow I mentioned a few days ago,came to Kisiizi and delivered a baby girl. I found her on the ward on Thursday, the day I had promised her that I would visit her with one of the social workers from our orphan project. She was keen to go home and was waiting in…

A bad start to Sunday: life is so cheap sometimes.

Warning: this blog does contain some graphic medical descriptions which you might find upsetting. The day began well with beautiful sunshine as we walked to the Hospital Chapel for the morning service. Half way through the service a midwife came to fetch me for an emergency and we rushed to labour ward, to be met…

A brave widow

I went out on another antenatal outreach clinic yesterday. I was interviewing a lovely pregnant woman called Anna who is expecting her 7th child. I asked her who she lived with and she said her husband “but he is gone”. At first I thought he had gone to find work somewhere but she actually meant…

Mud and rain

It has been quite a week, during which I became a seasoned driver in Uganda. I set out on Wednesday afternoon wondering quite what I was doing driving the hospital Landcruiser to Ishaka to see my son Calum and his wife Emily who are research associates at the university there. All went well down the…

A squashed journey and a clinic

I don’t know what the Guiness Book of Records has to say about how many people can fit into a Landrover which then hurtles down dirt roads alongside huge cliffs but I think the Kisiizi outreach clinic crew must come pretty close to setting a new record. There were 18 of us today crammed in.…

Mothers’ Waiting Home opens

Last Friday an opening ceremony was held for the new Mothers’ Waiting Home at Kisiizi. Moses, the hospital administrator was the master of ceremonies and speeches were made by the Rev Patrick, the hospital chaplain, Sister Sandra and Dr Francis Banya, representing the maternity department, Alan and Helen Smith, on behalf of Kisiizi Partners and…