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28-06-2006 Feature Lopiding hospital: adapting to changing needs in southern Sudan Lopiding hospital in northern Kenya was the ICRC's biggest field hospital, performing more than 60,000 operations in its 19-year history. At the end of June 2006, management was handed over to the Kenyan authorities. The ICRC's Andrea Koenig visited the hospital and sent this report.
©ICRC/A. Koenig/ke-e-00127
One of the wards at Lopiding, where more than 60,000 surgical operations were carried out.
At the height of the conflict in southern Sudan, this hospital close to the border with Sudan was help and hope for war-wounded civilians and soldiers. When the Sudanese civil war re-ignited in 1983, many of the war wounded were evacuated to medical facilities in neighbouring Kenya. By September 1986 their number had dramatically increased, and the Kenyan government asked the ICRC to set up a field hospital. none
Nurse Serah recalls her work at Lopiding
"When I first started my job here, I never thought that I would stay so many years…Once, we received a young Sudanese man, aged 22, severely injured by a bomb; the doctors had to amputate both legs. We did not think he would survive – but he did and spent a few weeks here until he could walk with his prostheses. It was like a miracle…" Serah Muthoni Gitigi, supervisor, medical ward, Lopiding hospital, 1993-2006 More than 37,000 patients As the conflict escalated, the hospital expanded to meet rising demand. By the end of 2005, a total of 37,558 patients had been treated at Lopiding hospital and over 60,000 surgical operations had been performed. Almost 200 Sudanese and Kenyan staff and a dozen expatriate medical staff, mainly from national Red Cross societies, have worked there over the past 19 years. Today, the hospital has a capacity of 500 beds. It has two operating theatres, an intensive care unit, a post-operative area, ten wards, a physiotherapy unit, a laboratory, and a hospital pharmacy. Read more fact & figures about the hospital. "It was the best time in my entire professional life", says Dr. Georg Kundert, a Swiss surgeon who served at Lopiding as a senior surgeon between 1997 and 1998. "Apart from the personal experience, it was a professional challenge to perform to my best with very simple means. It demanded creativity and it required excellent team work." Walking through an empty operating theatre, he remembers the days when they were operating at four tables at the same time, trying to save the lives of the war wounded from southern Sudan. Empty beds With the signature of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) between the government of Sudan and the Sudanese People's Liberation Movement on 9 January 2005 and the cessation of hostilities, the demand for the ICRC's services at Lopiding hospital gradually decreased. In April 2006 the beds "under roof", as the staff used to call the admission ward, were empty. By the end of May, all patients had been discharged.
©ICRC/A. Koenig
Surgeon Georg Kundert with Nyamer Gang, the last patient admitted to Lopiding hospital.
The ICRC stopped evacuating patients to Lopiding from southern Sudan on 28 February 2006. The last patient who benefited from medical evacuation to Lopiding was Nyamer Gang, a 60-year-old woman shot in the upper leg. |