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OU-HCOM 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 Heritage College
of Osteopathic Medicine (OU-HCOM), 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-HCOM,
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-HCOM 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-HCOM’s
statewide consortium of teaching
hospitals. Four of the 16 volunteers are OU-HCOM 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-HCOM 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-HCOM 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-HCOM web
site:
www.oucom.ohiou.edu/International/HaitiUpdates2010.htm. |