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Published by Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations

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Scots charity to help train African surgeons

This news post is over 3 years old
 

Charity develops new e-learning training

A Scottish global health charity is helping to train children’s surgeons in Arica.

Kids Operating Room is investing in the first Pan-African e-learning platform to help train surgeons across the continent, with content provided by two African surgical colleges, hosted on an online platform created by the Institute of Global Surgery of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland.

This innovative programme will see the West African College of Surgeons (WACS) and the College of Surgeons of East Central and Southern Africa (COSECSA) work together to provide a new and bespoke teaching resource mapped to the curricula of both training programmes.

It will be one of the first online teaching programmes for children’s surgery that focuses on low-resource settings.

Between them, the two colleges cover 32 African countries with a combined population of around 800 million. In funding this project, Kids OR has facilitated a new link between the two colleges who will work together  to provide this new resource.

The online platform to host the programme will be produced by the RCSI Institute of Global Surgery (IGS). RCSI has a track record in supporting surgical education,using interactive technology, in low resource environments,.

Professor Eric Borgstein, Secretary General of COSECSA  said: “This new resource is unique in several ways, not only is it firmly placed in a regional African context, but it is also the first of its kind to include a strong focus on professionalism and non technical surgical skills.”

Professor Serigne Magueye Gueye, President of WACS said that the programme is unique as it merges the delivery of facts and knowledge along with the ability to test understanding and apply these to daily clinical practice.

He added: “Although thousands of online resources already exist in surgical education, the peculiarity of this programme lies in the fact that it provides context for African needs as it is written by enthusiastic African surgeons from diverse backgrounds who are also able to compile and modify best practice from elsewhere in the world and apply it to the African healthcare system and its needs alongside their own valuable experiences.”

The course content will be delivered via a Moodle-based platform of interactive learning, with one module a week requiring around 2-3 hours of study.

Professor Mark Shrime, the O’Brien Chair of Global Surgery in RCSI said: “The RCSI Institute of Global Surgery is working towards a world where all children in need of surgery are able to access the care they need. A blended approach to education, with e-learning complementing in-service training, is a highly effective approach to developing the paediatric surgical workforce across a huge geographic region. This approach is particularly important in the context of the global pandemic.”

The platform will also support existing surgical and anaesthetic teams who care for children; providing them with a resource to refresh knowledge and revise detailed procedures ahead of operations.

The project is due to be launched in May 2021 at the World Health Assembly in Geneva.