choose a location


South Africa

-Overseas Orthopaedic Residency

-Outreach Education

-Memorandum of Understanding

-Patient Education


Uganda


Nicaragua


Afghanistan


Jamaica


Overseas Orthopaedic Residency Elective

UCSF began incorporating overseas missions into its orthopaedic resident training in 1992. From 1992 through 1998, fifteen of thirty-six graduating orthopaedic residents went on overseas volunteer missions. Of those fifteen residents, six (40%) have gone on additional volunteer missions after graduation; and three of these graduates have since led other volunteer missions that included UCSF residents


In 1998, the Orthopaedic Research and Education Foundation earmarked funds to sponsor a pilot program for a resident rotation at an Orthopaedics Overseas site. Dr. Holly Brown (UCSF Class of 1999) was the first American resident to be selected. She spent two and a half weeks at the Bedford Orthopaedic Center in Umtata, South Africa, a former homeland under apartheid. The caseload consisted of a variety of general orthopaedic problems with an emphasis on fracture management. At the Bedford Orthopaedic Center, a considerable amount of the trauma is sub acute in nature due to the delay in initial presentation to the hospital. The patient load is quite heavy. In addition to trauma, there are many tuberculosis infections and pediatric cases, with only one orthopaedic center to care for over three million people.


From 1996 to the present, a formal overseas elective rotation was developed as an opportunity for all fourth year UCSF residents. Residents may do this elective while rotating at the San Francisco General Hospital. This is the first and only such elective officially offered through an orthopaedic surgery program in the country. Residents are given a specific set of goals and objectives for the rotation. They keep a journal of all of their operative cases, listing the diagnosis, treatment and level of supervision provided by the Program Director. In addition, residents record the patients they see in consultation in outpatient, inpatient and emergency department settings. Residents teach the local staff of health care providers, and document the audience, setting and topic of all lectures and formal education they provide. The residents learn valuable lessons, both clinical and philosophical, during their rotation. Historically, three-quarters of all residents who have done the elective, engage in future volunteerism missions, well above the national average. Funding for this elective comes directly from faculty support and philanthropic donations from individuals and industry. IGOT has established an endowment fund on behalf of the late Dr. Chris McConnachie who was the founding Orthopaedic Surgeon of the Bedford Orthopaedic Centre. Dr. McConnachie had a significant impact on the residents who were fortunate enough to rotate during his tenure and in memory of his teaching and commitment to improving orthopaedic care in South Africa the McConnachie Traveling Fellowship Endowment was enacted in 2008 to ensure sustainable funding for this invaluable educational rotation.