CURE Children's Hospital of Uganda | |
CURE International | |
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Geography | |
Location | 97 Bugwere Road, Mbale, Mbale District, Uganda |
Coordinates | 1.0746N, 34.1719E |
Organisation | |
Care system | Private |
Hospital type | Specialized and Teaching |
Affiliated university | West Virginia University School of Medicine |
Services | |
Emergency department | I |
Beds | 42[1] |
History | |
Founded | 2000 |
Links | |
Website | http://www.helpcurenow.org/site/c.nvI1IeNYJyE/b.4421693/k.AC8A/About_the_hospital.htm |
Lists | |
Other links | Hospitals in Uganda Medical education in Uganda |
CURE Children's Hospital of Uganda is a specialized children's neurosurgery hospital in Uganda. It is a private hospital, owned and operated by CURE International. The hospital is also a teaching center in pediatric neurosurgery for Sub-Saharan Africa.
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The hospital is located in the city of Mbale, in Mbale District, in Uganda's Eastern Region. This location is approximately 245 kilometres (152 mi), by road, northeast of Kampala, Uganda's capital city, and largest metropolitan area.[2] The coordinates of the hospital are:01 04 29N, 34 10 19E; (Latitude:1.0746; Longitude:34.1719).
The CURE Children's Hospital in Uganda is a specialized neurosurgery children's hospital owned and administered by CURE International. The hospital is privately owned and charges a fee for its services. However, CCHU serves children with physical disabilities regardless of their ethnic background, religious affiliation or ability to pay. Opened in 2000, the hospital employs 6 doctors, 33 nurses and serves in excess of 7,000 patients annually, performing almost 1,000 operations every year. The children's neurosurgical diseases treated at the hospital include:
CCHU operates a busy outpatient clinic and owns a mobile van that transports sick children from remote areas to the hospital for care and returns them to their home areas after they have been treated.[3]
CCHU offers the following training programs in pediatric neurosurgery in collaboration with other stakeholders:
Starting in 2005, two neurosurgeons, Dr. Warf and Dr. Warren Boling of West Virginia University, performed the first three epilepsy surgeries ever done in the region. The program in ongoing and is being evaluated for further expansion.[5]
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