TANZANIA has introduced the first-ever day care laparoscopy surgery, which offers great potentials of relieving patients of pains and significantly reducing congestions in hospital.
The minimal invasive surgery, first
introduced in the country at Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre (KCMC)
in Moshi, is now widely used at the super specialised referral
hospital, with patients calling, getting operated and discharged on the
same day.
The Head of General Surgery at KCMC, Dr
Kondo Chilonga, who is also the pioneer of the key hole surgery in the
country after getting expertise under the auspices of Northumbria
Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust of the United Kingdom, told the ‘Daily
News’ here yesterday that the cost-effective procedure offers huge
relief to patients and the hospital.
Dr Chilonga said gone are the days when
patients and families had to spend long time in recovery and support at
the hospital, saying the burden has been purged, benefiting the nation
as well because patients undergoing the surgery can return to economic
activities earlier.
Laparoscopy is a type of surgical
procedure that allows the surgeon to access the inside of the abdomen
and pelvis without making large incisions in the skin.
Large incisions can be avoided during
laparoscopy because the surgeon uses an instrument, laparoscope, a small
tube with a light source and camera that relays images of the abdomen
and pelvis inside to a television monitor.
Having introduced the procedure,
Northumbria medical experts stayed at KCMC hospital for a while before
they returned to UK, but kept monitoring the procedures through a
telemetry link and telemedicine technology that started in 2003 between
Northumbria and KCMC.
Dr Chilonga said by 2009/2010 KCMC were
doing the surgery on their own, unless there were complications that
necessitated communicating with Northumbria via audio video, with
internet engineers facilitating the communications.
As of now, thousands of procedures have
been performed at the hospital, attracting patients from across Tanzania
and neighbouring countries. Before patients had to be admitted before
surgeries and stay for some days at the hospital but now dates are set
and patients call, get operated and leave on the same day.
Faster recovery, less pain and bleeding
after the operation and reduced scarring are among the advantages of the
new technology. Dr Chilonga said following the achievement, the
hospital contemplates establishment of the fully-fledged unit for
Laparoscopic Surgery.
Having facilitated that at KCMC, Dr
Chilonga and other staff have been offering training to medical
practitioners from Muhimbili National Hospital in Dar es Salaam, Bugando
Medical Centre in Mwanza and Mbeya Zonal Referral Hospital to spread
the procedure.
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