Professional
Profile on Professor Charles Ssali MBChB
FRCS (ED)
Professor Ssali
is a Ugandan medical doctor and researcher in both western and traditional
herbal medicines. He is a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons
(FRCS) in London.
After ten years
of scientific medical research, Professor Ssali has developed natural
nutritional supplements for building the body's immune system.
Secondary education at St. Henry's College in Kitovu. Passed Cambridge
School Certificate with 5 distinctions and 4 credits. Best results
in East Africa for that year (1953).
Was admitted to Makerere University Kampala for the Higher School
Certificate that he passed in 1955. He continued with pre-clinical
training in anatomy and physiology for two years followed by clinical
years in Medicine and Surgery leading to the degree of MBCHB in
1960.
Internship at Mulago Hospital was from January to December 1961.
He worked in general medical practice from 1962 after the internship.
He worked in Entebbe Hospital for six months followed by one year
in Bombo Hospital where he was in charge of medical and surgical
problems including obstetrical and gynaecological patients.
He returned to Mulago Hospital as a Senior Medical Officer in the
department of Ear, Nose and Throat. He obtained a scholarship to
understudy as consultant in Ear, Nose and Throat. He was later awarded
a scholarship by the Central Government of Uganda to study at the
Royal College of Surgeons at Lincoln's Inn Fields, London in 1964.
He passed the primary FRCS in London in April 1965 and proceeded
to practical training in the specialty of Ear, Nose and Throat at
the Royal College of Surgeons in Edinburgh, Scotland. Thereafter,
he worked as a registrar at the Victoria Hospital in Kirkcaldy Fife,
Scotland.
Later on he
worked at the Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh as a registrar as part
of his training. He passed the final examination of Fellow of the
Royal College of Surgeons in April 1967. This is the highest examination
degree in medicine and surgery.
He returned to Uganda and started working in Mulago Hospital as
a senior registrar in the department of Ear, Nose and Throat. He
was responsible for all the surgical and clinical work in the department
while under the supervision of Professor Steen.
For a period of 5 years he carried out research on the following
conditions: -
Atrophic
Rhinitis: HHe published a paper on "The Treatment of Atrophic
Rhinitis." A new and curative treatment (middle turbirectomy)
JLO 1973, Vol. 8, 397 - 403. This research formed the foundation
of modern treatment for this condition. This condition, known as
Kibobe in Uganda, had to date no effective curative method of treatment
though being commonly found the world over.
Atrophic Rhinitis
afflicts mainly those in the developing world. Most of them poor
and malnourished! It causes a smelly nose which is forbidding and
people affected are shunned in society. Women thus afflicted cannot
get married due to the foul smell of their noses. Professor Ssali's
pioneering treatment created a new era for these people, allowing
them to mix well in society. He received messages of congratulations
from Malaysia and India for his pioneering work. Professor Ssali's
method of treatment is still in use today. His findings have been
published in international journals.
Rhino Scleroma:
Dr. Ssali published a paper, "The Treatment of Rhino Scleroma"
JLO 1975, Vol. 89, 91 -99. It is still the standard in textbooks.
This condition, known as Kokolo in Uganda, is also worldwide in
nature. His research and discovery of treatment for this condition
created a breakthrough in its management.
Rhino Scleroma
can distort the face, the nose and throat of an individual creating
extreme disfigurement. Furthermore, if left untreated it is liable
to cause premature death of subject.
Dr. Ssali pioneered
and standardized the treatment for Scleroma.
Laryngo Tracheobronchitis:
"Steroids and Restoration of body fluids in liquid form as
the basis of proper management of Laryngo Tracheobronchitis"
by C. L. Ssali, Mulago Hospital, Kampala -- Proceedings of the 1974
Annual Scientific Conference of the East African Medical Research
Council.
Upon Professor
Ssali's publication, the treatment regime was changed implementing
his methods, which are still the standard today. ("The Child
in the African Environment Growth Development and Survival."
Editors: R. Owor, V. L. Ongom, B. G. Kirya, East African Literature
Bureau. Nairobi, Kampala & Dar es Salaam).
Laryngo Tracheobronchitis
is a condition that affects children between the age of 2 to 5 years,
causing respiratory obstruction caused by inflammation in the throat
and nose and lungs. Original treatment involved tracheotomy to allow
for continued breathing.
Professor Ssali's
research produced a new successful method of treatment without using
tracheotomy. Hence avoiding permanent damage and scars in the child's
breathing passages.
Dr. Ssali was appointed Professor and head of the department for
ear, nose and throat diseases which included teaching medical students
and running the department as a specialist in Ear, Nose and Throat.
He was the consultant for the Government of Uganda and Makerere
University in related problems.
Professor Ssali left Uganda and went to Kenya. He was appointed
consultant surgeon in Kenyatta National Hospital Nairobi Kenya'
with responsibilities to treat patients and teach medical students.
Dr. Ssali left Kenya and settled in the United Kingdom where he
worked as a consultant in the National Health Service (NHS). He
worked in the Stevenage General Hospital, London; Princess Margaret
Hospital, London; Victoria General Hospital; Kirkcaldy Fife, Scotland,
as a consultant, surgeon in ear, nose and throat. He was also a
consultant in the Royal Infirmary in Carlisle, England.
Dr. Ssali resumed his duties in the National Health Service (NHS)
of the United Kingdom. Again he worked as a consultant in Ear, Nose
and Throat (E.N.T.) together with Dr. James Tivendale in Victoria
Hospital, Kirkcaldy Fife, Scotland and other district hospitals.
During his time in the United Kingdom, Dr. Ssali privately carried
out part-time research to try and solve the HIV/AIDS treatment problem.
He made some significant breakthroughs in the formulation of a prototype
pill for which he obtained a British patent registered No. 2224649
on the 20th of August 1992.
Dr. Ssali returned
to Kampala, Uganda to start his own HIV/AIDS treatment research
centre. His decision was based on the poor output of the world research
effort into AIDS. Dr. Ssali decided to use experience gained during
his years of research at Makerere University between 1969 and 1979,
in order to help those most afflicted in the Africa and Asia. This
research programme was self-financed.
The objective
of Dr. Ssali's pioneering research was to find ways of controlling
the AIDS virus by using medical/non-traditional treatment. This
objective has been achieved through the development of natural nutritional
supplements code-named Mariandina A, B & J, that have been used
to treat over 18,000 HIV/ AIDS patients, with good results.
The founding
of the Mariandina Nutritional Health Products and the subsequent
development of the Mariandina natural nutritional supplements was
for the purpose of solving this AIDS pandemic by using affordable
treatment methods. Knowing that products from Western pharmaceutical
companies may never be affordable to third world countries.
These capsules
are composed of a combination of vitamins, minerals, essential enzymes
and micronutrients that are vital for body functions damaged by
the HIV virus. Mariandina natural nutritional supplements also contain
powerful antioxidants, flavanoids and immune enhancing herbal extracts.
Publications
explaining the benefits of Mariandina supplements have appeared
in various Journals, namely: The Journal of Transfigural Mathematics
Vol. 2. No.2 1996, published in Berlin; The Exposure, No. 70 December
1995 Kampala, Uganda; and the Medical Review, vol. 2, No. 1, Jan/
Feb 1996, Uganda, East Africa.
Dr. Ssali has
also presented his research findings by participating in the following
international conferences:
1. Under
the auspices of the Association of Research Scientists of Africa
(ARSA), Dr. Ssali staged a scientific symposium on Mariandina research
presented in the International Conference Centre Kampala, Uganda.
Attended by Uganda Medical Association doctors, Uganda Aids Commission
representatives, the Ministry of Health personnel and the Minister
of Health as the guest of honour on the 22nd of November 1995.
2. Voxjo
University International Conference on AIDS in Africa on the 23rd
of November 1996.
3. Attended
conference on nutrition and HIV/AIDS, from 22nd to the 25th of April
in Nice, France. The researchers from various countries of the world
including Britain, USA, Canada, Australia, Japan and Africa presented
their research findings on the value of various food items - including
vitamins and micronutrients - in combating HIV/AIDS.
It was concluded
that various food items have very significant value in the treatment
and alleviation of AIDS and boosting of the immune system. This
proved that the research carried out at the Mariandina Nutritional
Health Products, focusing on effective HIV/AIDS management strategies,
has been and is geared in the right direction.