Moses Murandu | |
|---|---|
| Born | |
| Education | Maluti Adventist Hospital, St Monica’s Maternity Hospital (Midwifery), University of Birmingham (PhD) |
| Awards | Ethel Bell Award, [1] Journal of Wound Care in March 2018 |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | |
| Institutions | False Bay Hospital, University of Wolverhampton |
| Patrons | Fondation de France [2] |
Moses Murandu (~1966) is a Zimbabwean scientist and nurse working at the University of Wolverhampton. [3]
Murandu grew up in rural Zimbabwe with his father and younger brother. [4] [1] As a child, he was directed by his family to dress his wounds with salt. [4] He also recalled that when his father, Aron Majazi Munawa, had extra funds, he would instead use sugar to treat open wounds. [5] [4]
Murandu experienced the illness and death of his younger brother as a child. He went on to study nursing and midwifery in Lesotho and South Africa respectively. [1] After the end of Apartheid, Murandu worked in South Africa as a nurse at False Bay Hospital where he was subjected to racism from the staff and patients. [2] In 1997, Marandu was recruited to the United Kingdom to work as a nurse in the National Health Service [4]
After finding that sugar was not commonly used in British hospitals, Murandu set about making the case for the treatment. [4] He self-funded an early study, and gained support from staff at the University of Birmingham and completed the first trial of the treatment in 2011 at Selly Oak Hospital. [6] [3] [7]
Murandu has won numerous awards from the journal Wound Care, including in 2017, first place in the category of "The best research from a Developing Country" [8] He continues his work as a senior lecturer and researcher in natural health remedies at the University of Wolverhampton. [2]