Chris Mol is a volunteer lecturer for THET’s BMET Programme.
Here he describes his experience training the next generation of technologists
in Zambia.
I have now been working more than a year at, the Northern Technical College (NORTEC), in Ndola, Zambia. It has been an interesting year. This blog is to share my experiences and my enthusiasm for this attractive country and its friendly people as well as my findings on the world of medical equipment, which is so essential for modern healthcare.
This THET/DFID supported activity is based on a 2011 needs assessment
in Zambian government hospitals which established that the medical equipment
situation in the country was indeed quite poor.
Typically, only 50-65% of all medical equipment that is found in hospitals
is functional. One of the root causes for this was found to be the absence of
technical personnel who have been trained to repair medical equipment. No such
training was available in the country.
Following up on this, THET has worked with the Ministry of
Health as well as the Ministry of Education to set up a training course for
Biomedical Equipment Technologists (BMETs). NORTEC, one of the leading
Technology Colleges in Zambia, was selected as the training institute to implement
this new curriculum. The BMET course is for a good part based on course modules
that were already given at NORTEC, such as on electronics, mathematics, and
computer skills. THET has supported NORTEC by installing a BMET workshop,
acquiring 2nd hand Medical Equipment for student practice, instruments/toolboxes
and last but not least hiring and funding volunteer lecturers to present the
Medical equipment specific lectures, this is where I come in.
NORTEC has now taken on 95 students, including 20 women, divided
over the three years of the BMET curriculum. The first cohort will complete
their studies at the end of 2016. THET is working with the Ministry of Health
to ensure that new positions for BMETs will be created at the hospitals by
2017.
While working here at the College, visiting hospitals and
talking to local experts, it has become clear to us that more needs to be done
in the country to substantially improve the medical equipment situation. To have
well-trained BMETs is certainly essential, but if the workshops at the hospital
continue to be so poorly equipped, if the number of technical people in the
hospital remains so limited (one technical person in a 700 bed hospital is
common), if the procedures to purchase spare parts remain so cumbersome, only
limited impact can be expected from well-trained BMETs.
Working on equipment at Ndola Hospital, Zambia. |
No comments:
Post a Comment