This will be a real-time journal of our travel to Botswana, escaping the Maine winter to spend three months teaching cardiology and supervising medical residents and students at the Princess Marina Hospital, the teaching facility of the medical school created as part of the University of Pennsylvania and the Botswana government partnership ("BUP").
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
Cardiology is here to stay
I believe I have established a needed service here. The residents and practitioners from all over the hospital call and request consultative and echocardiographic services for their patients. Today, a patient from Lobatse was referred for an outpatient echo. A patient was sent from the outpatient clinic who had severe AR, severe MR, TR with evidence of moderately severe pulmonary hypertension who will need valve-replacement surgery. A patient with an ST-elevation MI airlifted to South Africa returned with a new stent and rel
ief of post-infarction angina. An elderly man with complete heart block returned from the same hospital with a new pacemaker, and since cataracts were discovered, restored vision as a result of cataract extraction and lens implant. I am working with the echo companies to fund the 3 month training of an Xray technician to learn echocardiography, so a modern echo lab can be established here at Princess Marina Hospital. If this can happen, I will feel that I have made a difference here.
Nice title...great work!
ReplyDeleteThat's awesome Dad! Solid work!!
ReplyDeleteI am sure you will make a difference. You are a great technician and a caring person. What better DNA to make a difference. I look forward to your return to Maine to have you both for to Southport for dinner and debriefing!
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