Dr. Netterville Leads Team to Malindi, Kenya
Sanjay Athavale, MD, Vanderbilt University, AAO-HNSF/Alcon Fnd., Humanitarian Resident Travel Grantee In November 2011, a large team from Vanderbilt University led by Academy President-elect James L. Netterville, MD, traveled to Malindi, Kenya, for a medical mission. Dr. Netterville, founder of More Than Medicine, has taken an annual team to Kenya for the past three years and previously, to Nigeria for 10 years. Mumtaz J. Khan, MD, Kyle Mannion, MD, Sarah L. Rohde, MD, and Mark van Deusen, MD, joined Dr. Netterville and me. More Than Medicine and the Caris Foundation sponsored the trip, which lasted two weeks, from October 29 to November 11. We spent our time at Malindi General Hospital and Tawfiq Hospital, which were quite different in their setup and capabilities with Malindi General being more of a rural hospital and Tawfiq a more “modern” hospital. This dichotomy gave us a greater appreciation for the changes underway throughout Africa. All 24 team members packed personal belongings into carry-on luggage, allowing us to pack more than 50 bags’ worth of medical equipment into our checked luggage. The caseload in Malindi, Kenya, was quite exciting, with many cases that are rarely seen here in the U.S. These included extremely large goiters, benign tumors of odontogenic origin, salivary neoplasms, and benign skin lesions. I can honestly say that, on average, the smallest tumor we removed in Kenya was larger than the largest tumors we resect in the US. For me and the majority of the team members, the trip was a life-changing experience. To see how much can be done with so little resources is truly amazing. Moreover, Dr. Netterville and his brother, Joseph D. Netterville, MD, a Nashville anesthesiologist, have made this mission such a well-oiled machine, that anyone who participates can learn quite a bit about teamwork. For anyone interested in going on a medical mission trip, I would encourage you to do so. It teaches you as much about life and the strength of human fortitude as it does about surgery. It is a worthwhile experience that I hope every otolaryngology resident can undertake. Thanks to the AAO-HNSF Humanitarian Efforts Committee and the Alcon Foundation for supporting my life-changing trip to Malindi, Kenya.
Sanjay Athavale, MD, Vanderbilt University, AAO-HNSF/Alcon Fnd., Humanitarian Resident Travel Grantee
In November 2011, a large team from Vanderbilt University led by Academy President-elect James L. Netterville, MD, traveled to Malindi, Kenya, for a medical mission. Dr. Netterville, founder of More Than Medicine, has taken an annual team to Kenya for the past three years and previously, to Nigeria for 10 years.
Mumtaz J. Khan, MD, Kyle Mannion, MD, Sarah L. Rohde, MD, and Mark van Deusen, MD, joined Dr. Netterville and me. More Than Medicine and the Caris Foundation sponsored the trip, which lasted two weeks, from October 29 to November 11.
We spent our time at Malindi General Hospital and Tawfiq Hospital, which were quite different in their setup and capabilities with Malindi General being more of a rural hospital and Tawfiq a more “modern” hospital. This dichotomy gave us a greater appreciation for the changes underway throughout Africa.
All 24 team members packed personal belongings into carry-on luggage, allowing us to pack more than 50 bags’ worth of medical equipment into our checked luggage.
The caseload in Malindi, Kenya, was quite exciting, with many cases that are rarely seen here in the U.S. These included extremely large goiters, benign tumors of odontogenic origin, salivary neoplasms, and benign skin lesions. I can honestly say that, on average, the smallest tumor we removed in Kenya was larger than the largest tumors we resect in the US.
For me and the majority of the team members, the trip was a life-changing experience. To see how much can be done with so little resources is truly amazing. Moreover, Dr. Netterville and his brother, Joseph D. Netterville, MD, a Nashville anesthesiologist, have made this mission such a well-oiled machine, that anyone who participates can learn quite a bit about teamwork.
For anyone interested in going on a medical mission trip, I would encourage you to do so. It teaches you as much about life and the strength of human fortitude as it does about surgery. It is a worthwhile experience that I hope every otolaryngology resident can undertake. Thanks to the AAO-HNSF Humanitarian Efforts Committee and the Alcon Foundation for supporting my life-changing trip to Malindi, Kenya.