We are extremely proud that our former student Sala Abdalla is working as a surgeon in the NHS.


Sala has this to say about her experience and the support that she was given by our school:


Many school kids growing up in deprived areas of East London may not have ‘surgeon’ written down as a first career choice but Sala Abdalla had other ideas.

Sala, whose family came to the UK as refugees from the Sudan, was determined to follow a career in medicine after being moved by the injustices of private healthcare in her homeland.

“We left the Sudan when I was ten years old but it made a real impression on me that if you didn’t have money you were often destined to die prematurely of otherwise treatable conditions.”

Sala was recently appointed as consultant at Ealing Hospital making her one of only a handful of black female consultants working for the trust.

‘Anything is possible if you have the right work-ethic,’ says the 37-year-old consultant who could only speak Arabic when she arrived in Dagenham.

Sala added: “I sought solace in education and my teachers at Robert Clack School were extremely supportive. They never doubted that I would make it and I owe them a lot of gratitude.”

She is one of a growing number of women entering a traditionally male-dominated profession but the number is growing every year.

Sala said: “It takes a lot of commitment, hard-work and sacrifice to be a surgeon but it is an incredibly rewarding profession.

“I love what I do and there is no match for the satisfaction I get from knowing I have used my knowledge and technical skills to make a difference to another person’s life”

Her willingness to help others less fortunate led her to set-up a surgical charity called Operation International where groups of surgeons, nurses and anaesthetists volunteer to travel to low-income countries to carry out free operations and train local doctors and nurses.

She has made two trips to hospitals in rural Ghana working with fellow volunteers who performed 143 procedures in less than a week.

“It brings its own challenges and you just have to adapt. Power cuts were common and I sometimes had to operate with a torch strapped to my head. The staff in Ghana were exceptionally innovative and hard-working. It was a pleasure to serve the local community.”

Sala’s career in the UK is no less dramatic and, as a general and upper GI surgeon, she carries out a wide range of procedures.

“My specialty is fast-paced and dynamic and the breadth of disease-processes that it covers makes for interesting and satisfying work. I perform operations which are life-saving, such as removing a ruptured appendix or dead bowel.

“I also perform function-restoring surgery, treating patients with debilitating hernias or gallstone problems that interfere with their daily activities.

“I like the immediacy of the results. A patient can come in with a life-threatening condition and, if the procedure is successful, be sitting up in bed the next day.”

“My advice to any young woman interested in a surgical career is to never think it is beyond them. Surgery is one of the most demanding of medical disciplines, requiring years of dedication, discipline and resilience.

“However, it teaches you to become confident, decisive and an excellent problem solver. It is a rewarding career with opportunities to develop additional interests such as in research, teaching and mentoring.

“I would highly recommend a career in general surgery to any young person who is interested in a career that demands a lot but gives you even more in return.”

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