Honduras ENT Surgical Mission 2011
Christopher B. Perry, DO, Toledo, OH Honduras is a poor Central American country south of Mexico. Honduras has a population of more than 8 million people with only about 60 ear, nose, and throat (ENT) physicians to provide all the ENT medical and surgical care for the entire nation. The country has just one ENT residency with a total of only 10 physicians in training. From October 15 to 22, 2011, at the invitation of the government-run, 1,800-bed Hospital Escuela in Tegucigalpa, the capital city, and partnering with the Christian Medical and Dental Association/Global Health Outreach/Operation New Life organizations, I led a delegation of 10 medical volunteers, including Raymond R. Komray, MD, and Johnathan M. Winstead, MD, to provide medical and surgical training to Honduran ENT residents. Drs. Perry, Komray, and Winstead performed 27 surgeries, ranging from revision endoscopic nasal/sinus procedures to tympanoplasty/mastoidectomy operations and congenital and salivary-gland head and neck surgeries. Also, the medical team brought much-needed surgical equipment, including endoscopic cameras, monitors, and endoscopes donated by Storz and Ganim Medical, and a powered sinus surgery system from Medtronic. SurgicalOne sent a microscope repair technician, who repaired four operating microscopes for the ENT and neurosurgery departments. For several years prior to the team’s arrival, the Hospital Escuela ENT department had not had an operating microscope and had never performed endoscopic sinus surgery with a camera and monitor, which significantly limited the ENT residents’ ability to learn full-spectrum current ENT surgical techniques. When asked what the mission and the donated equipment meant to them, one resident repeatedly said, “I can’t stop smiling—thank you for helping the Honduran people.” The mission went so well that officials at Hospital Escuela invited another team to return to provide further ENT resident training. From February 5 to 11, I returned to Hospital Escuela, leading a delegation of 10 medical volunteers, including Liana Puscas, MD, and Dr. Winstead. Building on the success of the first mission, we performed 35 surgeries, ranging from revision endoscopic sinus procedures to tympanoplasty/mastoidectomy operations to head and neck cancer surgeries. The highlight was performing a successful endoscopic repair of a CSF leak on a patient with CSF rhinorrhea for 10 years. The medical team brought additional medical equipment, including a cautery unit, flexible fiberoptic endoscopes, and surgical instruments. The experience proved to be professionally fulfilling and personally gratifying to influence the ENT education, and the ENT medical and surgical care of an entire country. The team plans to return in October. To learn more about taking part in a future ENT surgical experience in Honduras or to donate ENT equipment to Honduran senior ENT residents who are completing their training and trying to start a practice on a meager budget, email me at cperry@toledoclinic.com.
Christopher B. Perry, DO, Toledo, OH
Honduras is a poor Central American country south of Mexico. Honduras has a population of more than 8 million people with only about 60 ear, nose, and throat (ENT) physicians to provide all the ENT medical and surgical care for the entire nation. The country has just one ENT residency with a total of only 10 physicians in training.
From October 15 to 22, 2011, at the invitation of the government-run, 1,800-bed Hospital Escuela in Tegucigalpa, the capital city, and partnering with the Christian Medical and Dental Association/Global Health Outreach/Operation New Life organizations, I led a delegation of 10 medical volunteers, including Raymond R. Komray, MD, and Johnathan M. Winstead, MD, to provide medical and surgical training to Honduran ENT residents. Drs. Perry, Komray, and Winstead performed 27 surgeries, ranging from revision endoscopic nasal/sinus procedures to tympanoplasty/mastoidectomy operations and congenital and salivary-gland head and neck surgeries.
Also, the medical team brought much-needed surgical equipment, including endoscopic cameras, monitors, and endoscopes donated by Storz and Ganim Medical, and a powered sinus surgery system from Medtronic. SurgicalOne sent a microscope repair technician, who repaired four operating microscopes for the ENT and neurosurgery departments. For several years prior to the team’s arrival, the Hospital Escuela ENT department had not had an operating microscope and had never performed endoscopic sinus surgery with a camera and monitor, which significantly limited the ENT residents’ ability to learn full-spectrum current ENT surgical techniques.
When asked what the mission and the donated equipment meant to them, one resident repeatedly said, “I can’t stop smiling—thank you for helping the Honduran people.” The mission went so well that officials at Hospital Escuela invited another team to return to provide further ENT resident training.
From February 5 to 11, I returned to Hospital Escuela, leading a delegation of 10 medical volunteers, including Liana Puscas, MD, and Dr. Winstead. Building on the success of the first mission, we performed 35 surgeries, ranging from revision endoscopic sinus procedures to tympanoplasty/mastoidectomy operations to head and neck cancer surgeries. The highlight was performing a successful endoscopic repair of a CSF leak on a patient with CSF rhinorrhea for 10 years.
The medical team brought additional medical equipment, including a cautery unit, flexible fiberoptic endoscopes, and surgical instruments. The experience proved to be professionally fulfilling and personally gratifying to influence the ENT education, and the ENT medical and surgical care of an entire country. The team plans to return in October.
To learn more about taking part in a future ENT surgical experience in Honduras or to donate ENT equipment to Honduran senior ENT residents who are completing their training and trying to start a practice on a meager budget, email me at cperry@toledoclinic.com.