User:Nkatorogo/sandbox

Patrick Edrin Kyamanywa is a Ugandan Surgeon, Academic, Academic administrator and Researcher. He is currently the Vice Chancellor of Uganda Martyrs University, a faith-

based private university owned by the Episcopal Conference of Uganda. He assumed office on 1 December 2021 replacing Professor Maviiri John, who retired.

Background and education
He holds a Master of Business Administration (MBA) in leadership of innovation and Change from York St John University in England; a master of Public Health (MPH) from the Nuffield Center for International Health and Development, University of Leeds UK; a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy of the United Kingdom and a founding Fellow of the College of Surgeons of East, Central and Southern Africa (COSESCA). He attained a Master of Medicine (MMed.) in General Surgery of Makerere University; a Diploma in Business Administration and Human Resource Management (HRM) from the college of professional Management New Jersey, UK; a Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery (MBChB) of Makerere University.

Career
He is the Vice Chancellor of Uganda Martyrs University. Former Deputy Vice-Chancellor of Kampala International University Western Campus where he rose through the academic ranks of Full professor of Surgery, Dean and Deputy Vice- Chancellor. He has also worked as Vice Dean, Dean, Full Professor of Surgery, and Acting Principal in the College of Medicine and Health Sciences of the University of Rwanda.

Research
He is an experienced researcher and his articles have been published in several authoritative journals globally as listed below;
 * Awareness, knowledge, attitude and practice towards measures for prevention of the spread of COVID-19 in the Ugandans: A nationwide online cross-sectional Survey. Published in Medrxiv.
 * Health professional training and capacity strengthening through international academic partnerships: The first five years of the Human Resources for Health Program in Rwanda published in International Journal of Health Policy and Management.
 * Non-physician clinicians in sub-Saharan Africa and the evolving role of physicians. Published in International journal of health policy and management.
 * Road traffic injuries: cross-sectional cluster randomized countrywide population data from 4 low-income countries. Published in the International Journal of Surgery.
 * Self-reported determinants of access to surgical care in 3 developing countries. Published in JAMA surgery.
 * Injury, disability and access to care in Rwanda: results of a nationwide cross-sectional population study. Published in the World journal of surgery.
 * Can focused trauma education initiatives reduce mortality or improve resource utilization in a low-resource setting? Published in World journal of surgery.