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Academic’s PhD a first for SA

Friday, 23 February 2018

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Academic’s PhD a first for SA

A CPUT academic has become the first person in South Africa to earn a PhD in Forensic Medicine and his work is helping to improve the forensic accountability with which emergency care providers respond to victims of gender-based violence.

A personal tragedy in 1995 inspired Dr Navindhra Naidoo, acting Head of the Emergency Medical Sciences Department, to pursue his field of research.

“My 19-year-old sister was murdered by an ex-boyfriend. I was still studying to be a paramedic at the time and realised that there was nothing in my curriculum that prepared me for that. It didn’t prepare us for screening, detecting or preventing these horrible things from happening.”

Naidoo said his key topic focused on gender-based violence, in particular, domestic violence, and sought to understand emergency care workers’ “current and potential response” to gender-based violence.

“What we found is that the current responses are deficient. It’s not that the rescuers don’t want to help. There’s a lot of ambivalence largely because there isn’t a sufficient referral system so the practitioners are not guided on where patients need to go and what kind of services might be available.”

Through a cohort design, he first looked at thousands of archived medical records and found that the detection rate of domestic violence or related kinds of gender-based violence, including cases of rape, was 5.1 patient contacts per 1000 female patients presenting to the Emergency Medical Services. A nine-fold increase in detection following the evidence-informed screening training and implementation translated to the detection of 47,9/1000 emergency care patients, with no adverse events. These rates are unprecedented for South African emergency care and support screening-policy implementation. The difference in domestic violence detection, quantifies the extent of the practice gap, with an alarming missed case detection of 42,8 per 1000 patients (females, 14 years plus).

In consultation with Stanford University, Naidoo developed a curriculum for the sensitisation of health workers and this was implemented in the Western Cape Emergency Medical Services.
The Health Professions Council of SA has since adopted the screening protocol.
“So about 70 000 practitioners are now ethically obligated by the HSPCA to routinely ask the question about the presence of violence in someone’s life and then to do a risk/safety assessment and provide the necessary support they might need,” says Naidoo. His work has also served, at the HPCSA, to position gender-based violence as a social determinant of health.

“What we are doing is using emergency workers as sentinels. No other person in the health service actually walks into someone’s bedroom, where the abuse occurs, to treat them in an emergency. The screening helps us to ask victims about the presence of violence and screen for risk, for example, whether there’s the presence of a firearm. When there is a risk, they can then advise the victim appropriately and enhance both public safety and practitioner responsivity.”

Written by Ilse Fredericks
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Emergency Medical Services Department receives praise from ER24

Monday, 31 August 2009

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Emergency Medical Services Department receives praise from ER24

The CPUT Emergency Medical Sciences Department is proving to be a leader in the training of highly skilled paramedics.

Recently, ER24, a national private emergency medical service provider, applauded the standard of teaching and learning at CPUT.

The praise for the department came just days after three first-year students assisted a CPUT student who collapsed while jogging at the Bellville campus running track.

Joseph Roberts, Brain Allchin, and Garth van Eck, who are all in their first year of study, said they were able to assist the student by applying exactly what they had learnt in class.

Roberts, who witnessed the student collapse at the Bellville running track said: “I immediately rushed over and felt for a pulse. I then asked his friend to call for help.”

Second on the scene was Allchin, who alerted ER24 for the dispatch of an ambulance.

Van Eck was then notified of the incident via cellphone by Allchin.

“I was asked to go to the institution’s entrance and direct the ambulance to the running track,” he said.

The ER24, paramedic that responded to the call, applauded the students for taking charge of the situation.

In a letter to the Emergency Medical Sciences Department, ER24 officials stated that the students showed “excellent insight and knowledge in the dynamics of emergency medical care.”

ER24 officials said the students’ quick response and initiation of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) contributed to a good prognosis of the student.

“This is an excellent reflection of the standard of training and education at the University,” stated ER24 officials.

Lloyd Christopher, Head of the Department, said training is hands-on. Students are also required to work at emergency services and at hospitals on weekends throughout the duration of the three-year programme.

Currently, CPUT is the only institution in the Western Cape offering the programme.

By Candes Keating

Written by CPUT News
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EMS Department aids Knysna fire victims

Friday, 23 June 2017

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EMS Department aids Knysna fire victims

Two staff members from the Emergency Medical Sciences Department were at the coalface of the recent devastating fires in Knysna, assisting with humanitarian aid.

The fires wreaked havoc in the area, leading to the evacuation of thousands of people with several loosing their lives and homes. Ahmed Bham, the national manager of search and rescue for the Gift of the Givers Foundation, contacted the EMS Department and informed them of their intention to provide humanitarian aid to the Knysna fire victims.
“The Department of Emergency Medical Sciences has maintained a good relationship with the Gift of the Givers Foundation since our contribution to their search and rescue mission in the 2015 Nepal earthquake,” says EMS lecturer Mustafa Zalgaonker.

Meyer and another EMS academic staff member, John Meyer, drove to Knysna with a CPUT Emergency response vehicle.
“Upon our arrival, our roles included site inspection, which was followed by aid distribution from the field distribution centre set up by the Gift of the Givers Foundation. In Buffelsbaai we were one of the first responders conducting site inspection and delivering sustenance to the front line fire-fighters bravely fighting the blaze. During our time in Buffelsbaai we also assisted local residents with emergency evacuation,” says Meyer.

They also assisted Knysna satellite hospital to transfer patients requiring further specialised care with the Gift of Givers: Critical Care ambulance from Knysna to George Provincial Hospital. 

Written by Ilse Fredericks
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