Summary
·
The
agreements with Zambian National Heart Hospital (NHH) and the Rwanda King
Faisal Hospital (KFH) will see the countries saving on the money they spend on
sending their people outside the continent for medical referrals
Dar es Salaam. The Jakaya Kikwete Cardiac Institute (JKCI) yesterday signed an agreement with similar facilities in Zambia and Rwanda in a landmark development that is geared at building the
capacity of medical experts among African countries while promoting medical tourism and reducing referrals to outside the continent.The agreements with Zambian National
Heart Hospital (NHH) and the Rwanda King Faisal Hospital (KFH) will see the
countries saving on the money they spend on sending their people outside the
continent for medical referrals.
The historic agreements are the
culmination of years of planning and investment by Save a Child’s Heart, an
international humanitarian NGO based in Israel.
This signifies an important
milestone in enhancing future cooperation in paediatric cardiac care between
Zambia, Rwanda, and the existing centre in Tanzania.
Gracing the agreements signing
event, the Deputy Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Health, Dr Grace
Maghembe, said the pacts offer benefits to all the three countries involved.
The MoU, she said, will cement the
good working relationships that Tanzania has with Rwanda and Zambia over the
years.
Through the MoU Rwanda and Zambia
will be able to send heart patients to Tanzania for treatment while their
medical experts would also be coming to the JKCI for capacity building
trainings.
“I was among the delegates who
recently travelled with President Samia Hassan Suluhu to South Africa where she
insisted on investing more in medical tourism among African countries as a way
of bringing changes in the health sector…,” she said.
The JKCI Executive Director, Dr
Peter Kisenge, said apart from training experts, the JKCI has a team working in
different regions to train local health workers on how best they can detect
heart patients from an early stage and refer them to JKCI before it is too
late.
“We are happy to be part of this
agreement as we will be able to save more lives even beyond Tanzania’s
borders,” he said.
A Senior Medical Superintendent from
the Zambia National Heart Hospital, Prof Chabwela Shumba, said his country has
been working with Tanzania on bringing its heart patients and medical experts
even before the MoU.
The agreement, he said, will give more
room to continue working together as the two countries have always been
partners in a number of other areas, including through the Tanzania-Zambia
Railway which was initiated by founding Presidents Kenneth Kaunda and Julius
Nyerere.
The Deputy Director at King Feisal
Hospital in Rwanda, Frederick Ngirabacu, said the agreement was another
milestone for the African continent to support each other and get solution
together as a continent.
He thanked Tanzania and Israel for
supporting Rwanda on giving training and treating its patients. He calls for
more collaboration in future to take Africa to the next level.
The cooperation was made possible
following a long-standing partnership between Save a Child’s Heart in Israel
and the Jakaya Kikwete Cardiac Institute in Tanzania, which includes having
treated more than 1,000 Tanzanian children for congenital heart conditions over
the last 20 years, training 23 medical professionals in specialized paediatric
cardiac care, equipment and medical disposables donations, as well as continued
support for the centre’s activities.
Today, the JKCI independently
performs hundreds of paediatric cardiac procedures, both surgeries and
catheterisations, thanks to a number of initiatives to train the manpower by
the government, including through the knowledge and skills gained in Israel
through the Save a Child’s Heart training programs and ongoing medical
missions, sponsored by Save a Child’s Heart Canada.
In a statement availed to The
Citizen yesterday by Save a Child’s Heart (Israel), the organisation said it
was currently training in Israel the first Paediatric Cardiac team of Zambian
medical professionals, among them Zambia’s first specialist paediatric cardiac
surgeon, who recently returned home after completing four and a half years of
training in Israel, and leads the program at the Zambia National Heart
Hospital.
This week a team of three physicians
from the King Faisal Hospital in Kigali will arrive in Israel to start their
training in Paediatric Cardiology, Paediatric Intensive Care and Anaesthesia.
Dr. Lior Sasson, Save a Child’s
Heart lead surgeon, said: “I am extremely proud to witness the lifesaving
activity taking place here at the JKCI carried out by my Mentee Dr. Godwin
Godfrey who is the first Pediatric Cardiac surgeon of Tanzania. I look forward
to working with Dr Ziwa, Zambia's first Pediatric Cardiac Surgeon trained in
Israel, to build a pediatric cardiac center of excellence at the NHH, and today
starts the training in Israel of the first Pediatric Cardiac Team from Rwanda”.
Simon Fisher, Executive Director of
Save a Child’s Heart, said: “Save a Child’s Heart is excited to witness the
signing of the two MOUs representing the expansion of its activities throughout
the African continent based on South-South partnership and cooperation.
He added, “Now that JKCI has become
a center of excellence for Sub Sahara Africa our capacity building activities
have potentially doubled taking place in two centers; Save a Child’s Heart in
Israel and JKCI in Tanzania.”
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