Arthur Mpimbaza, MBChB, MMed, MSc, graduated from Makerere University Medical School in 2000 with a Bachelors degree in medicine and surgery, and to date has been involved in clinical research, primarily related to malaria, working with the Makerere University-UCSF malaria research collaboration. During this period, he attained further training with a Masters of Medicine in Pediatrics (equivalent to a US medical residency) and Masters of Science in Infectious Diseases. It is through this collaboration that he has been privileged to work with and be mentored by distinguished scientists, specifically Prof Philip J Rosenthal (UCSF), Dr Sarah Staedke (LSHTM), Prof Grant Dorsey (UCSF) and Prof Grace Ndeezi. In 2011, he attained a faculty position as Assistant Lecturer at the Child Health Development Centre, Makerere University-College of Health Sciences. To acquire more skills and advance his career in research, he enrolled for a PhD in Health Sciences in 2012, at the Clinical Epidemiology Unit, Makerere University-College of Health Sciences.
Project
Determinants of disease severity among hospitalized children with severe malaria in Uganda
Dr. Mpimbaza's PhD thesis is centered on understanding the determinants of disease severity among children infected with P. falciparum. This project will directly address his career goals, in working to identify factors that contribute to severe malaria upon which public health programs can intervene. In his first aim, Dr. Mpimbaza will test the highly plausible hypothesis that delayed access to care is a major contributor to progression to severe malaria, and determine factors that delay access to care. It is anticipated that specific factors amenable to simple public health interventions will be identified. In his second aim, Dr. Mpimbaza will take a quite different approach, analyzing associations between host genetic polymorphisms and progression to severe disease, offering a different potential means of intervention, e.g. identifying and appropriately managing individuals at particular risk of severe malaria. Dr. Mpimbaza's PhD thesis will provide much needed clinic-epidemiological information on malaria as a life threatening disease, increasing understanding of underlying causes of disease severity and related deaths that are amendable to modification, aiding in the development of optimal strategies for policy formulation, planning, monitoring and evaluation of disease-specific interventions.
Mentors: Dr. Philip Rosenthal (UCSF), Dr. Charles Karamagi (MU), Dr. Grace Ndeezi (MU)
arthurwakg@yahoo.com