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OU-COM sponsors
Haiti earthquake
relief
Alumni, faculty,
residents provide
critical medical
care

(Athens, Ohio) –
Despite decades of
serving as a surgeon
and international
volunteer relief
physician, David
Drozek, D.O. (’83),
assistant professor
of surgery at the
Ohio University
College of
Osteopathic Medicine
(OU-COM), had never
encountered the
level of need he saw
in Haiti.
“One lady, who had
been buried for
three days, had some
of the
deepest wounds I
have ever seen. She
had lost control of
one foot
on the side of the
deepest wound,” he
wrote in reports to
OU-COM, later adding
that, “the work [in
Haiti] is becoming
more specialized.”
Along with
Drozek, 15 other
physicians, nurses
and other volunteers
affiliated with the
OU-COM traveled to
Haiti in late
February to help
provide that
specialized care.
The college
sponsored the
efforts, which
included dozens of
surgeries and
provided other types
of medical care for
victims of the
January 12
earthquake.
On February 20, the
volunteers gathered
in Haiti and then
split into two
teams. They included
physicians, surgeons
and
anesthesiologists,
some of whom work
within the Centers
for Osteopathic
Research and
Education (CORE),
OU-COM’s statewide
consortium of
teaching hospitals.
Four of the 16
volunteers are
OU-COM alumni.

One team, led by
Mark A. Foglietti,
D.O. (’82),
F.A.C.O.S., plastic
and
reconstructive
surgeon at the
Cosmetic Surgery
Institute in
Beachwood, consisted
of three Cleveland
Clinic South Pointe
Hospital residents.
They were dispatched
to the Quisqueya
Crisis Relief Center
and assigned to a
hospital in Port au
Prince. There they
performed dozens of
surgical procedures,
such as skin
grafting, flap
reconstruction for
amputations, wound
debridement and
general
reconstructive
surgery.
The posts and
photographs on
Foglietti’s Twitter
site revealed
glimpses into the
unpredictable rigor
of the Haiti relief
efforts. He
typically rose
before 4 a.m., and
worked until
evening, facing
major aftershocks,
sleepless nights and
serial amputations.
You can read his
posts and view his
photographs on his
Twitter feed:
http://twitter.com/drallnewyou.
“This was a hospital
treating major
surgical trauma and
serious medical
conditions,” said
Foglietti, who also
serves the college
as a clinical
professor of plastic
surgery. “The four
of us performed four
to five surgeries a
day, with the help
of anesthesia
residents.”
The three Cleveland
Clinic South Pointe
residents included:
·
Marc Polecritti,
D.O., CORE chief
resident in plastic
& reconstructive
surgery;
·
Grant Hunter, D.O.,
CORE anesthesia
resident,
·
Megan Rogers, D.O.,
CORE anesthesia
resident.
The second OU-COM
team was led by
Drozek, who also
works as a surgeon
at Doctors Hospital
in Nelsonville. His
group of nine
volunteers included
family practice
physicians, nurses,
paramedics and
non-medical
logistics and
construction
volunteers.
The team supplied a
full range of
medical care,
treating severe
wounds, stress
ulcers, dermatitis,
sickle cell disease,
gynecological needs,
malnutrition and
malaria, among
others. They worked
in cooperation with
DELTA Ministries
International at
Clinic Lilavois, a
village charity
mission hospital,
and later at
Quisqueya Crisis
Relief Center, a
medical clinic at
the Centre
D’Imagrerie Medicale,
in downtown
Port-au-Prince.
Drozek was named
“2009 Surgery Mentor
of the Year” by the
national Student
Osteopathic Surgical
Association in part
because of his
dedication to
humanitarian medical
work around the
world and in Athens.
Each year Drozek
takes a large group
of students to
conduct clinical
rotations in the
Central American
countries of El
Salvador and
Honduras.
Drozek’s team
included:
-
Peter
Dane,
D.O.,
associate
dean
of
predoctoral
education,
associate
professor
of
family
medicine
and
physician
at
University
Medical
Associates
of
Athens’
Express
Care
facility
-
Joanne
Bray,
M.S.N.,
director
of
clinical
assessment,
nurse
practitioner
and
emergency
room
nurse
-
Krista
Duval,
D.O.
(’08),
and
Dorinda
Midwood,
D.O.,
CORE
family
practice
residents
at
O’Bleness
Memorial
Hospital
-
Brian
Kessler,
D.O.,
clinical
associate
professor
of
family
medicine
and
director
of
medical
education,
Cleveland
Clinic
South
Pointe
Hospital
-
Katherine
Kropf,
D.O.
(’02),
family
practice
physician
with
University
Medical
Associates
of
Athens
and
OU-COM
assistant
professor
of
family
medicine.
-
Beverly
Meade,
life
flight
nurse
-
Kathleen
Marshall-Dane,
non-medical/logistics
-
Jesse
Midwood,
a
construction
volunteer
-
Gregory
Schano,
life
flight
nurse,
and
-
Jeffrey
Warner,
a
life
flight
paramedic
OU-COM and CORE
continue to raise
funds for a more
sustained role in
the Haiti medical
relief effort. As
Drozek wrote in his
final post, “the job
is not done. We will
continue to help as
we are able, to send
people and supplies,
to make useful
contacts, to help
Haiti heal.”
You can read
Drozek’s daily
updates, including
photos, at the
OU-COM web site:
www.oucom.ohiou.edu/International/HaitiUpdates2010.htm.
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