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Non-profit
volunteer medical group - HEARTT- Making a Difference
in Liberia.
-A special
health correspondent
Liberia's
highest referral and teaching hospital, the John
F. Kennedy (JFK), is fast recovering from years
of destruction, brought on by more than a decade
civil war. Today, the JFK is up and running with
specialized doctors and new and improved units.
A major supporter of this recovery process is
the Health Education and Relief Through Teaching
(HEARTT), a not-for-profit corporation. HEARTT
is based in the United States and has been engaged
with the JFK since 2003, providing overall health
care and health training.
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Dr.
Justin Bird - Orthopedic surgeon
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Dr.
David Knight - German Surgeon volunteering
under the HEARTT program
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Head
of HEARTT - Dr. James Adama Sirleaf and
Bird sharing ideas
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HEARTT
volunteer docts and JFK officials in photo
with Pres. Sirleaf at reception welcoming
the Doctors
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HEARTT
volunteer Nigerian pediatrician Dr. Oku
Emmanuel and with Dr. James Adama Sirleaf
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HEARTT's
President, Dr. James Adama Sirleaf says the major
aim of the organization is to sustain health care
delivery by bringing in specialist doctors to
teach "practice models" of medicine
to practitioners in Liberia. Reflecting on his
visit to Liberia in 2003, Dr. Sirleaf spoke of
the desperate need for medical practitioners.
"As you know five years ago, there were roughly
fifty to sixty doctors in the country. I realize
the need was to get medical doctors here, teaching
practical models of medicine" recalls Dr.
Sirleaf, as he looks back on the dire state for
health-care delivery in Liberia.
Today,
with the help of HEARTT, there's a functional
trauma unit, Orthopedic and Pediatrics sections
at the JFK, all staffed with volunteer doctors
and contractors brought in by the non-profit organization.
Currently, the group has over ten medical practitioners
at the JFK. These and other specialists come on
a rotational basis, offering surgeries to patients
and teaching medical school graduates, residents,
nurses and other practitioners how to ably deliver
health care. "HEARTT is here all the time;
we expect to have somebody on the ground in different
specialties all the time" says Dr. Sirleaf,
an Emergency Room physician, based in the United
States, as he explains how grounded the program
has become over the years, owing to its impact
on the health-care delivery system of Liberia.
Dr. Sirleaf, one of four sons of Liberian President
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, stresses the importance
of the practical teaching program. He says it's
hard to practice medicine without watching and
following the work of people who have been trained
and have practiced for years.
One
of those serving and teaching at the JFK is Dr.
Justin Bird, a young African American from New
York. Dr. Bird is an Orthopedic Surgeon, specialized
in dealing with disorders in the skeletal system.
He is volunteering with the HEARTT program for
two years.
Dr. Bird joined the JFK team in September 2009
and has been administering care to trauma patients.
These are patients with various degrees of fractures,
mostly from accidents. Dr. Bird explained that
he's not only treating patients but teaching other
practitioners how to quickly diagnose and take
care of patients to avoid complications that could
lead to amputations.
Seemingly
upbeat about the success of HEARTT's program,
Dr. Bird notes a significant reduction in the
number of amputations. He attributes the progress
to training being provided to health practitioners.
Dr. Bird: "A lot of people have been trained
and are working effectively despite the limited
resources. For some of the cases we see, if we
were in New York, we would have twenty surgeons,
but here we have to create different protocols
with the limited resources, and it worked and
has helped cut down a lot of complications and
the number of amputations." Despite the steady
progress, the New York-based HEARTT volunteered
orthopedic surgeon believes there is still more
room for improvement, disclosing that more health
personnel are being identified for training, in
order to build a sustainable orthopedic program
at the JFK.
Another
critical area that has benefitted from HEARTT's
partnership with the John F. Kennedy Hospital
is Pediatrics, the care and treatment of children.
Through the partnership, Liberia now has a Nigerian
pediatrician, Dr. Oku Emmanuel, who was brought
in to help cater to the medical needs of the huge
children population at the JFK.
While in Liberia, Dr. Emmanuel is expected to
set up a viable pediatric program at the JFK and
teach at the AM Dogliotti College of Medicine.
He has already set out his priorities in achieving
this goal. First and foremost, he says, is giving
children a voice by protecting their rights as
they seek treatment. According to Dr. Emmanuel,
children's rights are usually abused by parents
and medical practitioners when they are sick,
and he has vowed to improve that trend.
The
next priority for Dr. Emmanuel is to set up a
system for children, involving the teaching of
new protocols on how to effectively cater to them
when they come to seek medical attention. The
system takes into consideration the creation of
a bigger and more conducive space for examination,
treatment and admission of children.
As
a volunteered HEARTT Pediatrician at Dogliotti,
Dr. Emmanuel will train personnel in pediatrics,
as there is no Liberian doctor specialized in
the area. "When they get the lecture at the
school, then they can come and we teach them the
practical aspect also, 'cause medicine is practical,
like apprenticeship, he states. Dr. Emmanuel summarizes
his mission in Liberia with the popular adage,
"It's better to teach someone how to fish
than always giving that person fish."
Among other medical personnel who are visiting
Liberia on a short-term basis under the HEARTT
program is Dr. David Knight, a German Surgeon,
who performs general surgeries and conducts teaching
session. Dr. Knight and his team view their service
in Liberia as a wonderful experience. "We
are not only treating patients and teaching; we
are also learning," he admits. Dr. Knight
is leaving Liberia with one lesson--that doctors
in America are spoiled with the varieties of equipment
and gadgets, some of which they cannot do without.
"The first time I entered surgery, I thought
the JFK was lacking a lot; but after a few days,
I noticed some of the fancy equipment we feel
are important are not so important, and we can
do perfect surgeries without them," he noted.
Like
most institutions in the country, one of the major
challenges at the hospital is the limited supply
of electricity. Dr. Knight is hoping for an improvement
in that sector, to ensure a stable and more secure
electrical system at the nation's premier hospital.
He recalls an incident of power shortage just
when he was about to do surgery. Such an incident,
he warned, could be dangerous when one is in the
middle of a critical surgery.
The experienced German Surgeon describes the medical
team at JFK as wonderful and dedicated, but observed
that they are doing a hard job because they lack
role models. "They don't have teachers. A
big part of learning surgery is having somebody
to work with and learn from regularly," said
Dr. Knight. Touched by his experience, the HEARTT
volunteer doctor is going back to America as a
goodwill ambassador, to encourage more specialized
doctors to volunteer with HEARTT and contribute
to building a more sustained health practice at
JFK.
Liberian
doctors working with HEARTT volunteers also gained
from the partnership. Dr. Robert Mulbah sees the
program as rewarding and believes the interactive
and cordial learning and teaching environment
is enhancing the management of patients at JFK.
For the hospital's General Administrator Dr. Wvannie
Scott-McDonald, the service provided by HEARTT
is immeasurable. HEARTT, Dr. Scott-McDonald says,
"has made significant impact in improving
our health-care delivery. You can't just put dollars
and cents to their work."
Dr.
Scott-McDonald disclosed that her administration
and HEARTT are working towards branching out to
other areas of medicine, including obstetrics
and gynecology. She is hopeful that the programs
will attract and expose young physicians and nurses
to specialize in different fields of medicine.
The
JFK boss Chief believes that in the long run,
the Medical Center can have a sustained residency
program for new doctors, in line with the hospital's
teaching mandate. HEARTT is by no means being
left out of the implementation of this mandate,
as it is already working with the JFK to develop
standard curriculum for different medical specialties.
It is quite evident that strides are being made
in Liberia's health-care delivery system. Support
by groups like HEARTT, buttressing this progress,
goes a long way in helping to address some of
the long-standing inadequacies in the nation's
health-care system. Liberia understandably, welcomes
and appreciates such assistance to help improve
the health needs of the country and provide the
much needed health-care facilities for its people.
No wonder, then, that the Health Education and
Relief Through Teaching (HEARTT) is making a difference
in the Government's efforts toward an improved
and more efficient health-care delivery system
for Liberia.
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