Profile AI
Maureen Daisy Majamanda is a Senior Lecturer at Kamuzu University of Health Sciences, Malawi, formerly the University of Malawi. She has experience in classroom and clinical teaching of students, in-service training of healthcare professionals, and workshop management. She coordinates child health modules for undergraduate, post-basic, and postgraduate programs, and supervises students' research at bachelor’s and master’s levels. Maureen has experience and skills in nursing research, consultancy, module development, proposal writing, grant applications, report writing, interprofessional collaboration, leadership, and management. Maureen is a General Instructor's Course (GIC) trainer and a National Trainer in the following short courses/programs: Clinical Mentorship, Emergency Triage, Assessment and Treatment plus Trauma (ETAT), bubble CPAP (bCPAP), and Preceptorship. Maureen participated in the development of mentorship training manuals for the Malawi Health Sector, the Care of Infants and Neonates (COIN) manual, and the Emergency Triage Assessment and Treatment (ETAT) manual. Her passion lies in capacity building, evidence-based nursing, family- and child-centered care, child nutrition, childhood cancer, and interprofessional collaboration. From her PhD work, Maureen has developed a short learning programme for nurses working in paediatric oncology settings in Malawi. As a Child Health Nurse Specialist, Maureen's vision is to see healthcare professionals in Malawi working collaboratively to provide quality child healthcare while involving the family and the child at each level of care, in a compassionate manner, and utilizing the available resources.
Program Impact AI
The timeline suggests the program was associated with a noticeable boost in the author’s research output, with a much stronger flow of publications during enrollment than before it. Because graduation was recent and publication can lag by a year or two, the single post-graduation paper is best treated as an early signal rather than a firm indicator of longer-term productivity.