UCU eLearning Platform
Search results: 323
Exploration of the issues and trends that influence the nurse educator role within changing health care and educational environments. Includes analysis of the technological, legal, economic, political, cultural, ethical, and professional dynamics.
An opportunity to pull together your learning through 4 different lenses: Higher Education, Social - Political, Healthcare Services, and Technology. Deep discussion and your great ideas make this an especially interesting course.
Welcome to BIT by Mr. Paul KIsambira

Logistics management and distribution are critical components of supply chain management, focusing on the efficient flow of goods, information, and resources from origin to consumption. Effective logistics management requires strong analytical skills, strategic planning capabilities, and an understanding of global supply chain dynamics. Professionals in this field must also adapt to changes in market conditions and consumer preferences

The course covers the mechanisms of degradation of concrete structures, and it largely provides the students with the relevant knowledge of available techniques and their application for strengthening and/or upgrading existing structural systems. The course also provides how to conduct field monitoring and non-destructive evaluation of concrete structures.
On a further/broader perspective, this course outlines the basic concepts and methods of the life-cycle management including conceptual/basic design, detailed design including service life design, and maintenance and rehabilitation for civil infrastructure. Firstly, objectives, functions and performance requirements for infrastructure will be discussed including selection of types and materials, performance verification and service life prediction at the basic/conceptual and detailed design stages. Then, maintenance procedures after construction will be covered including inspection, prediction, assessment, and interventions. Finally, the management methodologies are focused on how structural performance is ensured with the coordination of design and maintenance and how decision is made on interventions. Life-cycle cost analysis and environmental impact analysis will be dealt with as the indicators for decision making.
- Teacher: Rodgers TAYEBWA
This course is designed to enable students acquire knowledge and skills needed to effectively utilize information systems and technology in to support of organizational strategy. Management information systems (MIS) is very relevant in project management. The course exposes learners to modern skills for a public administration. This course helps learners to be able to generate and organize data on project inputs and outputs; such information is useful in measuring and improving project performance both in the short and long term. This course helps students see the connection between information systems (IS) and organizational performance. The use of information and communication technologies (ICT) by individuals and organizations dominates the new public management reforms. There is a fundamental change going on in the way that organizations run businesses and interact with each other on a consistent basis. New types of infrastructure and applications are developed and utilized such as ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning), IOS (Inter-Organizational Systems), RFID (Radio Frequency Identification), and CRM (Customer Relationship Management) among other
The
objective of this course is to study the science and technology of animal
origin meat and poultry foods processing, preservation, quality analysis and
assurances. Structure and composition of various animal muscles: beef, pork,
poultry and fish. Slaughtering and butchering techniques. Post mortem meat
handling, storage and processing of meat products (smoked, salted, dried,
sausages). Poultry processing and cooling techniques. Egg processing and
preservation, fish structure and composition in relation to preservation and
processing. Icing, freezing, drying and smoking of fish products. Fish protein
concentrates. Disposal of waste products of meat, fish and poultry processing
- Teacher: William SSALI
This is an introductory course to Psychology. It seeks to introduce the basic concepts of psychology, selected theories as they pertain to medical knowledge and practice as well as personal and professional development. The students will be inspired to understand mental health in the light of psychology and its influence on human behaviour.
In particular, the field of medical psychology will be explored, with selected psychological approaches towards understanding general and selected specific psychopathological conditions and how to apply selected psychological approaches to manage them.
Learners will be exposed to the history and evolution of psychology and how modern psychology is a product of empirical experiments and practical applications to specific contexts of human conditions. Specific issues and situations, for example; substance abuse, anxiety, panic disorders and others.
- Teacher: Joy OGUTTU
This is an introduction to Sociology in General and Medical Sociology in particular. This is a course provides am insight into other non-medical issues which mainly hinge on those social issues that may impact on the outcomes of medical interventions. The first year Medical student is given the opportunity to explore sociological variable in their medical practice and how they can be harnessed to improve the well being of communities they serve.
It is a very easy and practicable course which gives the student the opportunity to move out of the classroom content and envisage the field, not only in the confines of medical facilities, but into the community. It also explores the relationship between a country's policies and systems or structures and how they can be improved to achieve equitable and quality healthcare to their citizenry.
Medical Sociology is a concept that seeks to help students understand medicine from a holistic approach. In other words, medical sociology provides a complementary non-biomedical perspective to medical practice. It explores the covert impact of the social, psychological and emotional aspects on the health and well being of an individual or a group of people. This will includes the following:
- The social dynamics of health, i.e., social determinants of health
- The psychological dynamics of health, i.e., the psychological determinants of health
- The emotional dynamics, i.e., the emotional determinants of health
The above dynamics will be explained in their relationship with the medical determinants of health.
In its complementary role, medical sociology helps the medical practitioner to engage the patient beyond prescriptive approach to include non-prescriptive interventions that may positively impact the health outcomes of an individual.
It also provides an opportunity for the medical student to consider other branches of medicine which may not necessarily be within a health facility setting but may involve other aspects like public health or research and design of health interventions for communities. Though not a core course, yet it provides some insight into what alternatives may be open after medical school.
This course introduces students to the sociology of healthcare and human behavior and addresses groups; concepts of health, illness and disease; patterns of health and illness; social class, gender; ethnicity; quality of life; media; ageing, society, housing, homeless, work, unemployment, stigma and how they relate to health.
- Teacher: Elizabeth NAGUDI
INTRODUCTION
This course introduces a holistic approach to mental health nursing by applying the models of promotion, prevention and care in diverse settings. It explores personal and cultural perceptions, values and beliefs regarding mental illness. It is designed to facilitate your understanding of common mental health disorders, aetiology, presentation and across the life span and your learning in the therapeutic nursing care of the patient with mental health problems using an evidenced based approach. It discusses the need and relevance of community mental health care in Uganda while stressing the role of the nurse in providing support to clients and their families to cope with mental illness.
COURSE OBJECTIVES
1. Describe the theoretical basis of mental health and psychiatric nursing
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by applying the nursing process and Gordons Functional Health Patterns to provide safe, culturally appropriate, patient‐centered care to clients with mental health problems.
3. Demonstrate therapeutic communication techniques, including counselling and teaching patients and families, in the mental health setting.
4. Demonstrate qualities and behaviors of the professional nurse in psychiatric settings (inpatient, outpatient and psychiatric rehabilitation)
5. Describe the role of community nurse in community mental health promotion, prevention and rehabilitation.
LECTURE SCHEDULE
|
Week |
Content |
|
1
|
Introduction to mental health (Concepts of mental health, stress and mental illness) Self-evaluation of personal values, beliefs and feelings towards mental health, mental illness and psychiatric institutions Cultural perceptions of mental health, mental illness and mental health nursing |
|
2 |
History of psychiatric services in Uganda Introduction to legal and ethical issues related mental health care Introduction to causes and signs and symptoms of mental illness |
|
3 |
The therapeutic relationship and communication History taking and Mental State Examination Assessing a client using Gordon Health Function patterns Introduction to the Nursing Process |
|
4 |
Depressive and Bipolar disorders Application of the Nursing process in depressive and bipolar disorders |
|
5 |
Schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders Application of the Nursing process in schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders |
|
6 |
Neurocognitive disorders (Delirium & Dementia) Application of the Nursing process in neurocognitive disorders
|
|
7 |
Psychiatric Emergencies (suicidal behavior, violence, Anger and Aggression Epilepsy |
|
8 |
Substance use disorders Application of the nursing process in substance use disorders |
|
9 |
Introduction to drug treatments in psychiatry Introduction to counselling and psychotherapies |
|
10 |
Anxiety disorders, obsessive compulsive disorders, trauma and stress related disorders Application of the Nursing process in anxiety disorders |
|
11 |
Psychiatric conditions in general medical care Psychiatric conditions in women
|
|
12 |
Psychiatric conditions associated with HIV and Covid- 19 Childhood mental disorders |
|
13
|
Personality disorders and sexual disorders Introduction to community psychiatry
|
COURSE GRADING
|
Assessments |
Marks |
|
Reflective Journal |
5 |
|
Health Assessment and Nursing care plans |
10 |
|
Attendance |
5 |
|
Course work |
5 |
|
Mid semester Exam |
25 |
|
Final assessment |
50 |
|
Total Marks Available |
100 |
RESOURCE MATERIALS
1. Boyd AM (2017) Psychiatric nursing: Contemporary practice (6th ed)Walters Kluwer Health/Lippincott Williams and Wilkins
2. Schultz J.M and Videbeck, S.L( 2013) Lippincott’s Manual of Psychiatric Nursing Care Plans(9th Ed) Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
3. Videbeck, S. L (2020). Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing. (8th ed) Wolters Kluwer Health/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
4. American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed.). Arlington, VA: Author
This course focuses on the characteristic features of different human parasites including their life cycles, Taxonomy of the parasites and the role of Zoonoses in the transmission of diseases
Dear students you are welcome to medical microbiology and its application to nursing
see the course outline bellow