More Than Just EAR Surgery
Patrick C. Walz, MD The week of February 18-26, I had the opportunity to travel with Project EAR to the Dominican Republic with Edward E. Dodson, MD, and Eugene G. Chio, MD, both from Ohio State University, and Krishna G. Patel, MD, PhD, from the Medical University of South Carolina. Project EAR is an ongoing humanitarian effort founded by Dr. Dodson and Paul R. Lambert, MD, to help the poor and underserved in developing countries that suffer from hearing loss, ear disease, and other diseases of the head and neck. This is accomplished through medical, surgical, and audiological outreach missions combined with training of local physicians and medical personnel and patient education. On this mission, we traveled to the Hospital Elias Santana, a mission hospital in Los Alcarrizos barrio just outside Santo Domingo. While there, our team worked with Roberto Batista Genao, MD, a local otolaryngologist and long-time Project EAR collaborator. We performed 45 procedures. While the bulk of Project EAR’s initial work was hearing-related with audiologic evaluations and ear surgery, the project’s mission has expanded to include the gamut of otolaryngology–head and neck surgery. During this most recent trip, we performed thyroidectomies for recalcitrant Graves’ disease, parotidectomy for an enlarging parotid mass in a pediatric patient, tympanoplasty and mastoidectomy, microtia repair, and adenotonsillectomy. Equipped with a single headlight for four operating rooms and suction machines generating negative pressure similar to that of a drinking straw, we were faced with new challenges that encouraged ingenuity and resourcefulness. My experiences in the Dominican Republic are tangible reminders of the reasons I was called to this field, working with the patients and local physicians to positively change the lives of others. Having participated in February 2011’s Project EAR trip, I formed relationships with fellow missionaries, Dr. Batista, and the patients and staff of the Elias Santana hospital that have continued to grow since our time in the Dominican Republic. I greatly appreciate the opportunity to grow both as a surgeon and a person, discovering a new appreciation for family, dedication, and humility. It is for these reasons that I look forward to a life of discovery through service in Project EAR and similar endeavors. Many thanks to the AAO-HNSF Humanitarian Efforts Committee for their generous support of this and so many other valuable opportunities. – See more at: http://aaobulletin.365.staging2.ascendmedia.com/Highlight.aspx?id=5104&p=416#sthash.0f7ubzky.dpuf
Patrick C. Walz, MD
The week of February 18-26, I had the opportunity to travel with Project EAR to the Dominican Republic with Edward E. Dodson, MD, and Eugene G. Chio, MD, both from Ohio State University, and Krishna G. Patel, MD, PhD, from the Medical University of South Carolina.
Project EAR is an ongoing humanitarian effort founded by Dr. Dodson and Paul R. Lambert, MD, to help the poor and underserved in developing countries that suffer from hearing loss, ear disease, and other diseases of the head and neck. This is accomplished through medical, surgical, and audiological outreach missions combined with training of local physicians and medical personnel and patient education.
On this mission, we traveled to the Hospital Elias Santana, a mission hospital in Los Alcarrizos barrio just outside Santo Domingo. While there, our team worked with Roberto Batista Genao, MD, a local otolaryngologist and long-time Project EAR collaborator. We performed 45 procedures.
While the bulk of Project EAR’s initial work was hearing-related with audiologic evaluations and ear surgery, the project’s mission has expanded to include the gamut of otolaryngology–head and neck surgery. During this most recent trip, we performed thyroidectomies for recalcitrant Graves’ disease, parotidectomy for an enlarging parotid mass in a pediatric patient, tympanoplasty and mastoidectomy, microtia repair, and adenotonsillectomy.
Equipped with a single headlight for four operating rooms and suction machines generating negative pressure similar to that of a drinking straw, we were faced with new challenges that encouraged ingenuity and resourcefulness. My experiences in the Dominican Republic are tangible reminders of the reasons I was called to this field, working with the patients and local physicians to positively change the lives of others.
Having participated in February 2011’s Project EAR trip, I formed relationships with fellow missionaries, Dr. Batista, and the patients and staff of the Elias Santana hospital that have continued to grow since our time in the Dominican Republic. I greatly appreciate the opportunity to grow both as a surgeon and a person, discovering a new appreciation for family, dedication, and humility.
It is for these reasons that I look forward to a life of discovery through service in Project EAR and similar endeavors. Many thanks to the AAO-HNSF Humanitarian Efforts Committee for their generous support of this and so many other valuable opportunities.
– See more at: http://aaobulletin.365.staging2.ascendmedia.com/Highlight.aspx?id=5104&p=416#sthash.0f7ubzky.dpuf