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Kokila Lakhoo, Associate Professor of Paediatric Surgery at the Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences, has been awarded a Carnegie-Wits Alumni Diaspora Fellowship for 2019 and the title of Honorary Professor of Paediatric Surgery by the University of Witwatersrand, South Africa.

Professor Kokila Lakhoo with colleagues at the South African Global Surgery Society (SAGSS) event.
Professor Lakhoo (front row, second from the right) at the South African Global Surgery Society (SAGSS) event

Professor Lakhoo is developing paediatric surgery through a link in Tanzania and has collaborative research projects in Malawi and South Africa. She is chair of the International Forum for the British Association of Paediatric Surgeons and is the President of the Global Initiative for Children’s Surgery (GICS).

This month, Professor Lakhoo spent a week reviewing a research programme in the Department of Paediatric Surgery at the University of Witwatersrand, where several collaborative research programmes with Oxford University have been put in place.

During her visit, she also gave a lecture on global children’s surgical development to the Medical Science Faculty of the University of Witwatersrand, and gave two inspirational lectures on surgical collaboration in Africa and breaking barriers in surgery to the newly formed South African Global Surgery Society (SAGSS).

About the Carnegie-Wits Alumni Diaspora Fellowship

The Carnegie-Wits Alumni Diaspora Fellowship seeks to stimulate research collaboration and networking between leading health sciences alumni, who now live and work in academic institutions around the globe, and their counterparts at the University of the Witwatersrand. 

The fellowship programme, which is supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York, aims to capitalise on, and boost the strength of the research networks which already exist, to stimulate dialogue, and help establish further collaborative and exchange partnerships with 'Wits' Alumni at international health research institutions. Fellows are elected in order to encourage and foster research in the Faculty of Health Sciences, to develop research collaborations, to promote exchanges of postgraduate students and to explore the building of other joint initiatives.

Meet the awardee

Global Surgery Stories

The ethical impacts of international medical electives on local students and patient care

Magdalena Chmura, a former Student Rep of OUGSG and current Foundation Year doctor shares a paper recently published with Dr Shobhana Nagraj.

Supporting exams and training in Ethiopia

Professor Kokila Lakhoo was recently invited to the College of Surgeons of East, Central and Southern Africa (COSECSA) as an external examiner for the Paediatric Surgery Fellowship Exams. In addition to the exams contribution, Professor Lakhoo and colleagues ran the BAPS HG neonatal skills course and a research seminar for beginners and advance participants. Read the full report below.

Our contribution to the Francophone Africa meeting in Cameroon

Professor Kokila Lakhoo reports on the Francophone Africa meeting in Cameroon from 25 to 30 November 2023, which was represented by 10 central African countries. As well as giving a keynote speech and various talks, Professor Lakhoo and colleagues ran the BAPS HG neonatal skills course, Oxford Global Surgery research seminar and a BAPS-Oxford laparoscopic course.

Children’s Surgical Course for regional hospitals in Tanzania

Professor Kokila Lakhoo reports on her latest visit to Tanzania, the first country in Africa chosen by Oxford University Global Surgery Group to host its new Children's Surgical Course.

Women as a driver to address gaps in the global surgical workforce

Isabella Busa, a medical student at the University of Oxford, shares her recently published article written with Dr Shobhana Nagraj as part of the Global Surgery Special Study Theme.

OUGSG members run OX5 for Oxford Children's Hospital

Two of our Oxford University Global Surgery Group (OUGSG) members, Professor Chris Lavy and Dr Shobhana Nagraj, completed the OX5 Run on Sunday 20 March 2022 for the Children’s Centre at the John Radcliffe Hospital.