Global ENT Outreach Mission to Chiclayo and Lima, Peru
Felipe Santos, MD Humanitarian Travel Grant Awardee Awarded the Distinguished Human-itarian Award of the American Academy of Otolaryngology in 2009, the Global ENT Outreach (GEO) is a humanitarian outreach organization dedicated to teaching and training local physicians and medical staff in otologic surgical medicine. For a week in November, GEO founder Richard Wagner, MD, invited Kimberly Rutherford, MD, of the University of Connecticut and me to join him on a trip to Chiclayo and Lima, Peru. Our trip to Chiclayo included four mornings of surgery at the Almanzor Aguinaga Asenjo Hospital, a tertiary care center that serves the population of Chiclayo and smaller neighboring cities. We performed 12 surgeries with an emphasis on chronic otitis media. It was an opportunity to serve and teach the faculty, residents, and nursing staff. The practical experience was a complement to an organized three-day workshop that was held over three afternoons at the Universidad Nacional Pedro Ruiz Gallo School of Medicine. Dr. Wagner and I gave several lectures and presented videos on middle-ear anatomy, physiology, and pathology. The course was free of charge and held for medical students, residents and practicing physicians including otolaryngologists. The second half of our trip was spent in Lima, Peru, at the Divino Nino Jesus clinic. Together with the Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, GEO held its 7th annual temporal bone course. This hands-on training course included lectures on anatomy, physiology, pathology, diagnostic testing, and surgical techniques for residents and practicing otolaryngologists. The course was complemented by two mornings of OR observation including tympanoplasties and mastoidectomies. Working with Global ENT Outreach was an opportunity to be a part of a sustained presence that is committed to teach future generations of otolaryngologists in developing countries. By establishing workshops with hands-on experience, the needs of the local patient population and the local medical community could be served. It is our hope that through these efforts local physicians will continue a legacy of teaching otologic surgical medicine. To learn more, contact fsantos@hei.org.
Felipe Santos, MD
Humanitarian Travel Grant Awardee
Awarded the Distinguished Human-itarian Award of the American Academy of Otolaryngology in 2009, the Global ENT Outreach (GEO) is a humanitarian outreach organization dedicated to teaching and training local physicians and medical staff in otologic surgical medicine.
For a week in November, GEO founder Richard Wagner, MD, invited Kimberly Rutherford, MD, of the University of Connecticut and me to join him on a trip to Chiclayo and Lima, Peru.
Our trip to Chiclayo included four mornings of surgery at the Almanzor Aguinaga Asenjo Hospital, a tertiary care center that serves the population of Chiclayo and smaller neighboring cities. We performed 12 surgeries with an emphasis on chronic otitis media. It was an opportunity to serve and teach the faculty, residents, and nursing staff.
The practical experience was a complement to an organized three-day workshop that was held over three afternoons at the Universidad Nacional Pedro Ruiz Gallo School of Medicine. Dr. Wagner and I gave several lectures and presented videos on middle-ear anatomy, physiology, and pathology. The course was free of charge and held for medical students, residents and practicing physicians including otolaryngologists.
The second half of our trip was spent in Lima, Peru, at the Divino Nino Jesus clinic.
Together with the Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, GEO held its 7th annual temporal bone course. This hands-on training course included lectures on anatomy, physiology, pathology, diagnostic testing, and surgical techniques for residents and practicing otolaryngologists. The course was complemented by two mornings of OR observation including tympanoplasties and mastoidectomies.
Working with Global ENT Outreach was an opportunity to be a part of a sustained presence that is committed to teach future generations of otolaryngologists in developing countries. By establishing workshops with hands-on experience, the needs of the local patient population and the local medical community could be served. It is our hope that through these efforts local physicians will continue a legacy of teaching otologic surgical medicine.
To learn more, contact fsantos@hei.org.