Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Pay it Forward

Tiny and scared, tears flow and pain seethes up through a hole in his tummy. A man makes a slight gesture with his hand, distracting the tiny boy from the nuisance in his belly and suddenly a smile appears and tears vanish into thin air.

We often call something someone can do that can't be fully explained a "gift." I find myself in this situation while in the presence of this doctor at work.

Dr. Alvear is a pediatric surgeon. As the founder of WSF, for the past 11 years he has led surgical missions to countries such as the Philippines, Thailand, Honduras, and India inspiring other physicians, nurses, and medical staff to exercise their calling in the service of humanity.

A sea of parents waits outside. One after another they arrive. Each one brings his or her child to a small chair in front of the doctor. Looking out the door of our small examination room, the line seems as if it will never end. And still, he treats each little patient as if he or she was his first patient of the day, his only patient.

At the inaugural meeting of the Mission to Ethiopia, Dr. Alvear spoke about the main principles of the World Surgical Foundation as being threefold:

1) Provide much needed surgical services to underserved patients.
2) Donate important medical supplies and equipment to host hospitals,
3) And most importantly, to give invaluable training to surgeons and residents of the host hospital.

A young medical student from Israel, Sarah Tannenbaum, watches the good doctor at work and eagerly awaits answers to her questions. Suddenly, he turns to the young medical student and says, "see where the urethra connects to the bladder?" he proceeds to explain the x-ray and give a prognosis with an energy and enthusiasm one could only hope to achieve on his best of days. His love for what he is doing is palpable.

Meanwhile, surgeons from the Black Lion Hospital pepper him with questions, hoping to tap his vast knowledge and experience with these complicated procedures in hopes that they can one day safely and successfully treat these maladies in their own patients.

Dr. Befikir Elefachew watches intently as Dr. Alvear's nimble fingers resect a small piece of colon from the tiny figure on the operating table. He then gently hands Dr. Elefachew the instruments and guides him through the rest of the surgery. "How else will he learn the necessary procedures and techniques to operate on his own patients safely and successfully in the future?"

Dr. Alvear firmly believes that training and education is the most important goal of these missions. He encourages surgeons to develop relationships with members of ICS (International College of Surgeons) in order that top surgeons will visit them more often bringing their expertise. Members of the ICS, like orthopedic surgeon Maxime Coles (presently on the Ethiopia mission), are invited to join the missions and frequently attend. Workshops on the latest techniques, such as the laproscopic surgery trainings given by Dr. Rolando Mendiola are provided to the surgical staff of the host hospitals.

In fact, if you were to wander the fourth floor of the Black Lion Hospital and peak your head into any of its six operating rooms you would see and hear the WSF volunteers eagerly engaging the Ethiopian medical staff in instruction. By all appearances you could say that a small teaching hospital has been erected in this place of need - fertile soil to sew the seeds of much needed medical training.

Later on in the locker room, Dr. Befikir Elefachew can hardly contain his surprise and excitement when sharing his feelings about the day with a doctor from the WSF mission. "Three procedures in one day, and we started late! We usually only do one case per day! We've had other groups come and work with us, but it was never like this!"

Two weeks of surgery to individual patients potentially touches hundreds of lives. Teaching invaluable skills to able surgeons will surely touch thousands.

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How to Use this Blog

Read about the World Surgical Foundation and its mission to Ethiopia under the entry entitled "Overview of the World Surgical Foundation's..." below.

The Ethiopia mission blog posts begin at the top of the page starting with the most recent post.

Some brief advice on reading blog posts.
1. Go to the top of the page to find the most recent post.
2. Read the date at the top of the latest entry.
3. Read the entries from the bottom up for each date. Each entry posted on that date will be time stamped. This will help you read the posts in order (this may be relevant if we are following a particular story of a patient or event).
4. To find a list of all blog posts, go to the bottom right hand side of the blog. The entries are listed by date and title.

Overview of the World Surgical Foundation's Mission to Ethiopia

Read about the World Surgical Foundation and its exciting upcoming mission to Ethiopia.

Addis Ababa

The Mission

From February 13 - 26, 2009 the World Surgical Foundation will bring its medical team to Addis Abab, Ethiopia. According to a report by the United Nations Centre for Human Settlements in January of 2000 "Addis Ababa...shows a paradoxical situation in Ethiopia. On one hand it, with the highest concentration of facilities per population than other centers in the country, enjoys a privileged position. On the other hand the city is not capable of accommodating the increasing population that is being attracted by the luring facilities and seemingly employment opportunity. Hence poverty is rampant and widespread in the city...urban poverty beleaguers the city and requires serious attention to curb the consequential disaster."

The Blog: February 14th - 25th, 2009

This blog will chronicle the daily achievements of the World Surgical Team in Addis Ababa from February 14 - 25, 2009. Here you will meet the doctors and nurses of the mission and read about them in action. Here you will meet the patients, each with his or her own unique story to tell. Here you will read about the surgeries, each promising to deliver an account of healing and transformation. Please tune in!

The World Surgical Foundation

Created in 1997, the World Surgical Foundation inc. (formerly World Mission of Central PA), serves people in developing or impoverished countries where modern healthcare is not available or is too costly. This volunteer organization of surgeons, anesthesiologists, nurse anesthetists, nurses and other caregivers performs at least one surgical mission per year to bring hope and improve the quality of life for hundreds of people who could not otherwise receive surgical care. The WSF also provides teaching, supplies and equipment for hospitals and medical facilities around the world and supports smaller groups or individuals with the same goal or mission in the United States and abroad.

We Need Your Help!

Dear Friends of the World Surgical Foundation,

We have seen that great acts occur when caring individuals just like you join together in support of building—and in many cases—rebuilding community.

You are needed for our mission to Ethiopia! This is a volunteer mission, and as always the Word Surgical Foundation relies on the generosity of its donors in order to bring life-changing surgery to those who need it most. The doctors and nurses of WSF are poised and ready to bring a better quality of life to the underserved people of Addis Ababa. The Addis Ababa University Medical School has arranged for the WSF to work in area hospitals in order to assist them with their tremendous overflow of patients. Most of the patients who will be served by the mission will have no hope of ever receiving the surgical procedures they need without the WSF. These people are quite literally waiting for our help!

This is a tremendous opportunity for both the health care professionals who serve on the mission as well as those who support it financially to transform the lives of people in need.

The mission to Ethiopia is still in need of essential funds for the following items.

1) Funds to ship a 40 square ft. of cargo at a cost of $11,000.00
2) Operating tables costing $4,000.00 each (5 tables = $20,000.00)
3) Anesthesia machines at $6,000.00 each (we need 4).
4) Laparoscopic equipment totalling $13,000.00.
5) Other equipment and supplies totalling $50,000.00.
6) Support expenses for nurses and others volunteers who have insufficient funds.

In total $100,000.00 needs to be raised in order to make the mission to Ethiopia a success.

Please join us in creating transformation for the people of Addis Ababa and Ethiopia. We invite you to send any amount that works for you. Any gift amount will get us one step closer to raising $100,000, and helping to rebuild and transform lives. We will then share with the people of Addis Ababa your generosity and let them know that they, their families and their community have never been alone.

Sincerely,

Dr. Domingo T. Alvear
President, World Surgical Foundation

Please Send Donations To:

World Surgical Foundation
P.O. Box 1006
Camp Hill, PA 17001

For more information, you can reach the World Surgical Foundation by sending an email to mail@worldsurgicalfoundation.org, calling Nancy Cohen at (717) 232-1404 or visiting our website at http://www.worldsurgicalfoundation.org.