Britain Nepal Otology Service Mission to Nepalgunj, Nepal
Mark Brandt Lorenz, MD, House Ear Clinic, AAO-HNSF and Alcon Foundation Humanitarian Travel Grantee Nepalgunj is a small town in the southwestern Terai province of Nepal, known as one of the poorest areas in one of the world’s poorest countries. Streets are densely populated with rickshaws, ox-driven carts, bicycles, motor scooters, and barefoot children. The Britain Nepal Otology Service (BRINOS), www.brinos.org.uk, is a charitable organization that has made humanitarian trips several times a year to Nepalgunj for more than 20 years. BRINOS has treated 39,000 Nepalese patients, has been responsible for more than 4,000 major ear surgeries, and helps provide hearing aids to the local community through trained local otologic assistants who treat patients year-round. In November 2011, during our eight-day otologic surgery camp, our group of four surgeons operated on more than 100 major cases. We performed tympanoplasties, mastoidectomies, and stapedectomies under local anesthesia, reserving our limited general anesthetic resources for only the very young. Many patients walked several days to come to our camp, occasionally barefoot, across hilly terrain. We recruited people from the village to help sterilize instruments and assist with surgery. Patients were always grateful and stoic, despite limited access to pain medication and meager accommodations. Our team consisted of a surgeon and nurse from England, an anesthetist and nurse from Scotland, and two surgeons from Thailand. Most days were 12-hour efforts, using tents and empty rooms in a local ophthalmologist’s facilities. The patients were stoic intraoperatively, and always thankful for our efforts. This experience was a reminder of the privilege and good fortune in my life, reaffirmed the virtue of my clinical efforts, and set a new horizon and decisive direction in my future career. I am thankful that the AAO-HNSF Humanitarian Efforts Committee and Alcon Foundation provided funds for my trip, and guided me toward this productive and meaningful organization.
Mark Brandt Lorenz, MD, House Ear Clinic, AAO-HNSF and Alcon Foundation Humanitarian Travel Grantee
Nepalgunj is a small town in the southwestern Terai province of Nepal, known as one of the poorest areas in one of the world’s poorest countries. Streets are densely populated with rickshaws, ox-driven carts, bicycles, motor scooters, and barefoot children. The Britain Nepal Otology Service (BRINOS), www.brinos.org.uk, is a charitable organization that has made humanitarian trips several times a year to Nepalgunj for more than 20 years. BRINOS has treated 39,000 Nepalese patients, has been responsible for more than 4,000 major ear surgeries, and helps provide hearing aids to the local community through trained local otologic assistants who treat patients year-round.
In November 2011, during our eight-day otologic surgery camp, our group of four surgeons operated on more than 100 major cases. We performed tympanoplasties, mastoidectomies, and stapedectomies under local anesthesia, reserving our limited general anesthetic resources for only the very young. Many patients walked several days to come to our camp, occasionally barefoot, across hilly terrain. We recruited people from the village to help sterilize instruments and assist with surgery. Patients were always grateful and stoic, despite limited access to pain medication and meager accommodations.
Our team consisted of a surgeon and nurse from England, an anesthetist and nurse from Scotland, and two surgeons from Thailand. Most days were 12-hour efforts, using tents and empty rooms in a local ophthalmologist’s facilities. The patients were stoic intraoperatively, and always thankful for our efforts. This experience was a reminder of the privilege and good fortune in my life, reaffirmed the virtue of my clinical efforts, and set a new horizon and decisive direction in my future career. I am thankful that the AAO-HNSF Humanitarian Efforts Committee and Alcon Foundation provided funds for my trip, and guided me toward this productive and meaningful organization.