International honour for cardiology fellow

12 December 2018 | Story Supplied. Photo Supplied. Read time 2 min.
Dr Charle Viljoen (centre), a clinical research fellow in the Division of Cardiology, receives his award from Dr Sally Davies, co-chair of the Royal College International Awards Subcommittee, and Dr Andrew Padmos, chief executive of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada.
Dr Charle Viljoen (centre), a clinical research fellow in the Division of Cardiology, receives his award from Dr Sally Davies, co-chair of the Royal College International Awards Subcommittee, and Dr Andrew Padmos, chief executive of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada.

Senior cardiology registrar Dr Charle Viljoen, a clinical research fellow in the University of Cape Town’s (UCT) Department of Medicine, has been awarded the 2018 International Resident Leadership Award by the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada.

Awarded annually to an international medical resident who demonstrates leadership in specialty education while encouraging the development of future leaders in medicine, the honour was conferred on Viljoen at the recent International Congress of Residency Education (ICRE) in Halifax in Canada.

Viljoen was nominated by Professor Peter Raubenheimer, programme director of the Fellowship in Internal Medicine at UCT, who described his nominee as a “unique individual” who had contributed more “than any single individual in recent memory” to many parts of resident and undergraduate training.

“He is a popular teacher, renowned for his enthusiasm, excellent communication skills and expertise,” Raubenheimer wrote in his nomination. Viljoen’s recognition of a deficiency in training of undergraduates in electrocardiograms (ECG) saw him develop a very successful lecture series for fourth- and final-year medical students, and he recently took his teaching innovations online. He has developed an online ECG course and an ECG reference teaching app, which are now the focus of an educational PhD.

“In his later years as a resident, he was instrumental in instituting two major changes to residency training in the programme: The formal protected time programme of seminars was updated and modernised to keep track with curriculum and examination changes, and the rotational roster for clinical training was changed to better accommodate a broader exposure to the various experts in our department,” Raubenheimer added.

These changes are now standardised within the UCT training programme.

“[Viljoen’s] impact is now moving internationally, with the ECG app already having been downloaded 8 500 times since inception.”


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Creative works and book awards


UCT recognises and celebrates major creative works and outstanding books produced by members of staff at the university.

Twin cities connect struggle and liberation sites Associate Professor Svea Josephy received a Creative Works Award for her solo exhibition, Satellite Cities, at today’s graduation. It is one of three such awards. 13 Dec 2018
Symphony of elements wins Creative Works Award Professor Hendrik Hofmeyr, of the South African College of Music, receives a Creative Works Award at today’s graduation for his composition Second Symphony – The Elements. 13 Dec 2018
Creative Works Award for Womb of Fire Dr Sara Matchett’s Creative Works Award winner, Womb of Fire, addresses how centuries of violence in South Africa continue to play out on women’s bodies. 13 Dec 2018
UCT Book Award for classics scholar Professor David Wardle’s work Suetonius: Life of Augustus has won him the 2018 UCT Book Award. 13 Dec 2018
 

Inspired to achieve


Read about some of our remarkable students who are graduating this season.

Four doctors, two families make it a double It’s not often that two sets of brothers who are close friends graduate from the same two faculties – and each with the title of doctor. 14 Dec 2018
Commitment, passion and dogged determination Due to graduate with a PhD in Medical Biochemistry, Kehilwe Nakedi reflects on her academic journey and the pleasure of seeing things finally fall into place. 12 Dec 2018
UCT remedies a past injustice The story of Raymond Suttner receiving his LLM from UCT almost half a century after withdrawing his thesis from examination has captured imaginations around the country. 11 Dec 2018
Unspeakable tragedy yields master’s degree When Mabuyi Mhlanga’s young daughter died in a car accident two years ago, she channelled her grief into addressing the issue of road safety around schools. 11 Dec 2018
‘I want to reach the places my father did not’ Tafadzwa Mushonga will be the first PhD graduate from the Centre for Environmental Humanities South, forging ahead from where her father left off. 10 Dec 2018
A passion for education From a young age, masterʼs graduand Sonwabo Ngcelwane has seen education as the key to rising above one’s circumstances – no matter how challenging. 10 Dec 2018
Never too late to overcome the odds PhD candidate Witness Kozanayi relied on his determination, the support and sacrifice of others, and a fascination for his homeland to fuel his academic success. 07 Dec 2018
Growing pesticide, lead threat to vultures Vultures play a vital housekeeping role in the wild, but like many African raptors they’re threatened by pesticide and heavy metal poisoning, says PhD candidate Beckie Garbett. 07 Dec 2018
 

Golden memories


Members of the University of Cape Town’s class of 1968 will reunite to celebrate their Golden Graduation this week. Madi Gray, a veteran of the nine-day Bremner sit-in of 1968, will be among those UCT alumni celebrating this milestone.

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