Princess Margaret Hospital (Funafuti)

Princess Margaret Hospital
Geography
Location Funafuti atoll, Tuvalu
Coordinates 8°30′54.72″S 179°11′57.843″E / 8.5152000°S 179.19940083°E / -8.5152000; 179.19940083Coordinates: 8°30′54.72″S 179°11′57.843″E / 8.5152000°S 179.19940083°E / -8.5152000; 179.19940083
Organisation
Hospital type General
Services
Emergency department Yes
Beds 50
History
Founded Hospital on Funafuti founded 1913, current site 2003

Princess Margaret Hospital (PMH) on Funafuti atoll in Tuvalu is the only hospital in the country, and the primary provider of medical services for all the islands of Tuvalu.[1] The hospital is located about 1.3 kilometres north from the centre of Funafuti on Fongafale islet.[2]

For 2010, the total health budget was AUD $4,696,042.[3]

The hospital has 50 beds with separate wards for men, women and infants. It offers basic routine medical, surgical, obstetric and gynaecologic services.[3] There is also an Intensive Care Unit (ICU), a surgery room and nurses' station.[4] PMH also provides accident and emergency services.[5]

Services to the outer islands of the country is provided by satellite clinics, staffed generally with a nurse and a midwife.[1][6]

History of health services

First hospital at Funafuti (1913)

The first hospital was established at Funafuti in 1913 at the direction of G.B.W. Smith-Rewse, during his tenure as the District Officer at Funafuti from 1909 to 1915.[7] At this time Tuvalu was known as the Ellice Islands and was administered as a British protectorate as part of the British Western Pacific Territories. In 1916 the Gilbert and Ellice Islands Colony was established. From 1916 to 1919 the hospital was under the supervision of Dr J. G. McNaughton, when he resigned the position remained vacant until 1930, when Dr D. C. Macpherson was appointed physician at the hospital. He remained in the position until 1933, when he was appointed to a position in Suva, Fiji.[6]

During the colonial administration, Tuvaluans provided medical services at the hospital after receiving training at the Suva Medical School, which changed its name to Central Medical School in 1928 and which later became the Fiji School of Medicine.[8] Training was provided to Tuvaluans who graduated with the title Native Medical Practitioners, nurses or "Dressers", the male equivalent of nurses.[6]

During World War II

During World War II the hospital on Fongafale atoll was dismantled as the American forces built an airfield on this atoll. The hospital was shifted to Funafala atoll under the responsibility of Dr Ka, while Dr Simeona Peni provided medical services to the American forces at the 76-bed hospital that was built by the Americans at Vailele.[9]

Post-War

The Tuvaluans benefited from the canned food supplied by the American forces, although the change in diet continued after the war, which resulted in long term impacts on health. Tuvaluans adopted a diet that includes high levels of corned beef, rice and sugar, consumed even when fish and traditional vegetables are available.[6]

The change of diet to include more processed foods is believed to contribute to increasing levels of diabetes, hypertension and cardiovascular diseases among Tualuans.[10]

After the war the hospital returned to Fogafale and used the American hospital until 1947 when a new hospital was built. However the hospital built in 1947 was incomplete because of problems in the supply of building materials. Cyclone Bebe struck Funafuti in late October 1972 and caused extensive damage to the hospital.[6]

Princess Margaret Hospital

In 1974 Gilbert and Ellice Islands Colony was dissolved and the Colony of Tuvalu regained independence on 1 October 1978. A new 38-bed central hospital was built at Fakaifou on Fogafale atoll, with a New Zealand aid grant. It was completed in 1975 and officially opened on the 29 September 1978 by Princess Margaret after whom the hospital was named.[11] The building now occupied by the Princess Margaret Hospital was completed in 2003 with construction of the building being funded by the Japanese Government.[4]

Medical Staff

Tuvaluan doctors (2008) Dr Nese Ituaso-Conway (left) and Dr Puakena Boreham (right)

The Tuvaluan medical staff at PMH has been assisted by expatriate doctors from Philippines (Dr. Jun Oballo and Dr. Denniszon Mendoza), China, Germany, Russia and Burma whose services are provided through United Nation Volunteers (UNV) funding. The last UNV expatriate doctor worked in Tuvalu from 1997 to 2002.[6] In 2008, at the Cuba-Pacific ministerial meeting, Cuba agreed to provide qualified medical doctors to work in Tuvalu and to provide medical education to Tuvalu students.[6]

The Tuvaluan medical staff at PMH in 2010 & 2011 comprised the Director of Health & Surgeon, the Chief Medical Officer Public Health, an anaesthetist, a paediatric medical officer and an obstetrics and gynaecology medical officer.[3][12] There were also four Cuban doctors working at the PMH.[3] Allied health staff include 2 radiographers, 2 pharmacists, 3 laboratory technicians, 2 dieticians and 13 nurses with specialised training in fields including surgical nursing, anaesthesia nursing/ICU, paediatric nursing and midwifery.[3] PMH also employs a dentist. The Department of Health also employ nine or ten nurses (including Dressers) on the outer islands to provide general nursing and midwifery services.[6]

The current Director of Health is Dr. Nese Ituaso-Conway (MBBS (Fiji); MPH (UH, Hawaii)).[3]

Provision of referral and general health services

Since independence Tuvalu has had one hospital, the Princess Margaret Hospital (PMH), in Funafuti that provides referral and general health services to support the health clinics on each of Tuvalu’s outer islands and for Tuvaluans living on Funafuti. Each Community Health Centre on the smaller outer islands is staffed by a midwife and general nurse.[1] The Community Health Centre on Vaitupu, which has the second-largest population in Tuvalu (1,591 in the 2002 Census), is operated by a senior nurse, junior nurse, assistant nurse and a sanitation officer.[10] Since 2008 the health infrastructure on the outer islands was improved with Community Health Centres, with facilities for inpatient care, being built at Vaitupu, Niutao and Nui with funding provided by the Japanese government's Grassroots program.[3]

Patents are referred to PMH for basic surgery, such as peptic ulcers, appendicitis, hernias, removal of lesions and other minor procedures.[1] Patents requiring more complex surgery are sent to the Colonial War Memorial Hospital in Suva, Fiji or to New Zealand under the NZ Medical Assistance Scheme, which is part of the Official Development Assistance (ODA) Programme administered by the NZ Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade.[13] In 2010 there were a total of 18 patients sent for surgery, mainly to Fiji.[3] Specialist eye and plastic surgeon teams from Australia[1] and Taiwan also visit PMH.[5]

Medical problems in Tuvalu

In the 19th and 20th century, after the beginning of commerce with Europe and the United States, the primary medical problem in the islands was tuberculosis.[6] Tuberculosis is on the decline, from an average 36 cases per year to averaging 19 per year from 1975 to 2009.[6] [Note 1]

Since the late 20th century the biggest health problem in Tuvalu, and the leading cause of death, has been heart disease,[4] which is closely followed by diabetes[5] and high blood pressure.[4] PMH provides outpatient services with outpatient numbers attending PMH falling dramatically from 58,847 in 1990 to 30,395 in 2000; and during this period the inpatient numbers at PMH dropped marginally from 898 to 820.[1] Tuvalu’s population to nurse ratio is low by regional standards at about 225:1 (at 2002).[1]

In 2014 the World Health Organisation (WHO) confirmed an outbreak of dengue fever in Tuvalu. The illness has re emerged in several Pacific Island countries after a period of twenty years.[16]

Surgical procedures

A total of 1084 surgical procedures were performed during the first 10 years of independence from 1978 to 1988. Visiting surgical teams performed 29% of these procedures. Fifty percent of the procedures related to obstetrical and gynaecological operations, eye surgery and abdominal operations with the most common operations being cataract extraction, tubal ligation and appendicectomy. During that period, only 12 patients were sent overseas for surgical treatment.[17] An analysis of 254 surgical, obstetric and gynaecological procedures during the same period established that the postoperative mortality rate was 0.4 per cent and the morbidity rate was 13 per cent.[18] An analysis of 132 obstetric and gynecologic operations associated with complicated pregnancy and delivery during the period from 1988 to 1989 established that there were 38 cesarean sections, of which 76 percent were emergency operations. There was no maternal mortality. The complication rate was 13 percent and included two neonatal deaths. The cesarean birth rate during the study period was 7.6 percent.[19]

Non-government organizations provide health services

There are no private formal medical services available in Tuvalu.[1] Non-government organizations provide health services, such as the Tuvalu Red Cross Society; Fusi Alofa (the care and rehabilitation of disabled children);[20] the Tuvalu Family Health Association (training and support on sexual and reproductive health); and the Tuvalu Diabetics Association (training and support on diabetes).[1]

Government health policy

Te Kakeega II - the Tuvaluan national strategies for 2005-2015 - refers to the health priority of the “maintenance of PMH and outer island clinics, the latter especially for maternal and child health care."[21]

Notes

  1. The population of Tuvalu was 9,561 at 2002 census and the population at the 2012 census was 10,640.[14][15]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Bruce Knapman; Malcolm Ponton & Colin Hunt (2002). "TUVALU 2002 Economic and Public Sector Review". Asian Development Bank. pp. 134–136. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
  2. Map of Funafuti Centre - Fogafale Motu. Tuvaluislands.com.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Motufaga, Dr Silina (2011). "Situational Analysis of Specialist Clinical Services (Tuvalu)" (PDF). Fiji School of Medicine. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "2007 University Student Exchange Programme- Fiji and Tuvalu" (PDF). Saga University-Asia/Pacific Cultural Centre for UNESCO (ACCU). 9–25 March 2008. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
  5. 1 2 3 Lawrence Zdenek Walker. "Elective Report April-May 2012" (PDF). Retrieved 16 March 2013.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Resture, Setapu Asenati (March 2010). "TE MAAMA PALA: Continuity and change in coping with Tuberculosis in Tuvalu" (PDF). A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of Masters of Arts in History - The University of Auckland, N.Z. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
  7. Teo, Noati P. (1983). "Chapter 17 - Colonial Rule". Tuvalu: A History. Institute of Pacific Studies, University of the South Pacific and Government of Tuvalu. p. 132.
  8. Teo, Noati P. (1983). "Chapter 17 - Colonial Rule". Tuvalu: A History. Institute of Pacific Studies, University of the South Pacific and Government of Tuvalu. pp. 132–133.
  9. Lifuka, Neli; edited and introduced by Klaus-Friedrich Koch (1978). "War Years In Funafuti" (PDF). Logs in the current of the sea : Neli Lifuka's story of Kioa and the Vaitupu colonists. Australian National University Press/Press of the Langdon Associates. ISBN 0708103626.
  10. 1 2 Panapa, Tufoua (2012). "Ethnographic Research on Meanings and Practices of Health in Tuvalu: A Community Report" (PDF). Report to the Tuvaluan Ministries of Health and Education: Ph D Candidate Centre for Development Studies - “Transnational Pacific Health through the Lens of Tuberculosis” Research Group. Department of Anthropology, The University of Auckland, N.Z. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
  11. Sopoaga, Enele (1983). "Chapter 19 - Post War Development". Tuvalu: A History. Institute of Pacific Studies, University of the South Pacific and Government of Tuvalu. p. 151.
  12. "Tuvalu Standard Treatment Guidelines 2010" (PDF). Ministry of Health, Tuvalu. 17 October 2011. Retrieved 10 April 2015.
  13. "V3.40 Entry to New Zealand for the purpose of medical treatment or consultation". New Zealand Immigration Department. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
  14. "Population of communities in Tuvalu". world-statistics.org. 11 April 2012. Retrieved 20 March 2016.
  15. "Population of communities in Tuvalu". Thomas Brinkhoff. 11 April 2012. Retrieved 20 March 2016.
  16. "WHO says dengue now in Tuvalu". Radio NZ International. 29 May 2014. Retrieved 31 May 2014.
  17. AK Leppäniemi (1990). Surgery in Tuvalu: a 10-year review. 60(5) Australian and New Zealand Journal of Surgery 373-6.
  18. AK Leppäniemi (Feb 1991). Where there is no anaesthetist.... 78(2) Br J Surg. 245-6.
  19. AK Leppäniemi (April 1993). Obstetrics and the general surgeon. 176(4) Surg Gynecol Obstet 365-7.
  20. Corlew, Laura (2012). "The cultural impacts of climate change: sense of place and sense of community in Tuvalu, a country threatened by sea level rise" (PDF). Ph D dissertation, University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  21. "Te Kakeega II - National Strategies for Sustainable Development 2005-2015" (PDF). Government of Tuvalu. 2005. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
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