Mission: Uganda

Overview:

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St Mary’s Lacor Hospital (Lacor Hospital), located in the Gulu District of Northern Uganda, was founded in 1959 by a group of Comboni missionaries and was later developed and expanded by a Canadian surgeon, Dr Lucille Teasdale, and an Italian pediatrician, Dr Piero Corti.1 The hospital grew from a 30-bed hospital to a 483-bed health care centre, providing care to about 500 inpatients and 800 outpatients daily. Lacor Hospital also supports and operates 3 peripheral 24-bed health centres, each about 10 km from the hospital, to serve the villages surrounding Pabbo, Opit, and Amuru.

The hospital has become a training ground for various health care professionals, including students from the faculties of medicine and pharmacy and the midwifery programs of Gulu University, Makerere University, and Mbarara University. In addition, the Lacor School of Nursing and Lacor School of Laboratory Technology were developed within the hospital. In 2009, the hospital’s executive team identified the need for the Department of Pharmacy to establish optimal strategies for logistical support and technical assistance with regard to medication management and pharmacy practice.

The challenges highlighted at Lacor Hospital parallel the vision of the World Health Organization (WHO) and the International Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP) of optimizing patient safety, utilizing health care resources responsibly, and ensuring the integrity of the medication supply chain. In 2009, Pharmaciens sans frontières (also known as Pharmacists Without Borders—Canada or PSF-Canada) was contracted by the Teasdale-Corti Foundation and the Lacor Hospital executive team to provide pharmacy support, knowledge exchange, and technical assistance to the Lacor Hospital Department of Pharmacy.

Two PSF-Canada pharmacists conducted the initial on-site evaluation, which resulted in 24 recommendations aligned with the FIP’s 2008 Basel Statements on the future of hospital pharmacy. The recommendations presented by PSF-Canada served as an action plan for interventions and a guiding document for the PSF-Canada pharmacists and the Lacor Hospital pharmacy management team to achieve the vision of the 2008 Basel Statements for hospital pharmacy practice.

The first PSF-Canada pharmacist began working at Lacor Hospital in May 2010.

In total, the mission consisted of 9 deployments of Canadian pharmacists over the period 2010 to 2015. The mission ended in October 2015. Seven PSF-Canada pharmacists were deployed for periods of 3 to 8 months. Once on site, each PSF-Canada pharmacist was presented with a work plan by the PSF-Canada mission leader, who was located in Canada. The plan included specific goals for the deployment that would advance the mission toward meeting the strategic goals of the PSF-Canada action plan. Every 1 to 2 weeks, the mission leader would connect with the on-site pharmacist, via social media, to review progress and reprioritize goals if required. Details of how each intervention was put into action were not documented, but annual assessments were performed.

To track progress, and to ensure continuity and momentum, the annual mission assessments were conducted annually or biennially from 2010 to 2015. For these assessments, each of the 2008 Basel Statements was ranked as met, partially met, not met, or not applicable. In addition, each of the PSF-Canada recommendations was ranked according to level of completeness (not started, discontinued, in progress, or completed). After evaluation of each of the 2011 and 2013 assessments, 5 new recommendations were recognized and added to the PSF-Canada action plan, for a total of 10 new recommendations.

Each assessment was conducted by the PSF-Canada mission leader, the head pharmacist at Lacor Hospital, and the PSF-Canada on-site pharmacist.

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Objectives:

Through the implementation and optimization of FIP’s Basel Statements:

  1. Logistical optimization of the pharmacy

    • Optimizing patient safety, utilizing health care resources responsibly, and ensuring the integrity of the medication supply chain.

      • Conduct Drug Utilization Reviews (DURs) mainly in the use of anti-infective drugs to ensure responsible, safe and effective use

    • Optimal strategies for logistical support and technical assistance with regard to medication management and pharmacy practice

  2. Provide academic support of Pharmacy program at the University of Gulu and The School of Nursing at Lacor

  3. Implement and assess hospital formulary, procedures, organizational improvement of the department of pharmacy and the establishment of inventory control.

Team Members:

  • May– December 2010: Ghada Shaka

  • December 2010 – April 2011: Lisa Brander

  • April – September 2011: Doret Cheng

  • January – June 2012: Doret Cheng

  • September 2012 – March 2013: Jennifer Weibe

  • March – September 2013: Nathalie Chenel

  • January 2014 – July 2014: Allison Kirkwood

  • February – June 2015: Elizabeth McMahon

  • July – September 2015: Lisa Brander

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Collaboration:

  • Teasdale-Corti Foundation

  • St. Mary's Hospital

Outcomes:

  1. From 2009 to 2015, the number of fully achieved (status of “met”) statements climbed from 18 (24%) to 44 (59%). 

  2. In addition, 14 statements achieved the status of “partially met”, increasing the success of the mission. 

  3. The number of “not applicable” statements was reduced from 18 (24%) in 2009 to 13 (17%) in 2015. 

  4. Seven of the 13 statements ranked “not applicable” revolved around human resources and training and thus required national-level collaboration. That level of collaboration was beyond reach for the hospital and for this particular PSF-Canada mission.

    • For a full list of FIP Basel Statements which were met please see this page

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