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Tools for Healing
By Rashel Stephenson
“Do you have money for the sutures?” a hospital worker
asked the man who had brought his wife in for surgery. Like many
hospitals in Uganda, here supplies were scarce. Only two sets of
sutures remained. To buy more, the hospital needed money. The man
raced back to his village to sell a goat, but when he returned,
he learned his wife had died. Originally heard on National Public
Radio in January 2007
Sutures in every size, class, and composition lay at the sterile
fingertips of Emory Healthcare surgeons. Boxes are so abundant in
the United States that we order them by the hundreds – and
casually discard them when a new product is released. “As
one of the country’s top medical facilities, we are always
acquiring the most cutting-edge technology and latest product to
stay at the forefront of advancing medicine,” said Chris Johnson,
assistant director of Emory Healthcare’s materials management
department. “As better equipment and supplies become available,
we
have no use for the others.”
Stringent and changing health care guidelines also cause excess
medical supplies to become waste in hospital storerooms. Eventually,
these “useless” supplies end up in incinerators and
landfills throughout the United States.
MedShare International provides an alternative – medical recycling.
The organization collects useable surplus medical supplies from
hospitals around the country and re-sorts and distributes them to
under-equipped hospitals and clinics around the globe. Not only
has MedShare saved more than 755,200 cubic feet of landfill space,
they have ultimately saved thousands of lives.In Uganda, as in most
undeveloped countries, even the most basic medical supplies are
in serious demand. “MedShare is about bridging the gap between
our surplus and their need,” said MedShare CEO and co-founder
A.B. Short. Currently serving 89 countries with continual expansion,
MedShare has sent $41 million worth of medical supplies to needy
regions of the world since 1998.
“Emory has been with us from the beginning,” said Short.
Before officially founding MedShare, Short and co-founder Bob Freeman
consulted with Jim Curran, dean of the Rollins School of Public
Health (RSPH) and Bill Foege, Presidential Distinguished Scholar
and Professor Emeritus in the Hubert Department of Global Health
at RSPH.
Short credits Foege, currently a fellow with the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation’s Global Health Program, with giving MedShare
its most critical piece of advice. “Bill [Foege] simply pointed
out that current non-profits collecting surplus were missing something.
These organizations assumed developing countries needed anything
and everything without ever having a conversation with the receiving
end about what they really need,” recalled Short. “If
we could connect with those needy hospitals and clinics, we could
really make a difference.”
And so MedShare connects. With reliance on triangular partnerships,
MedShare continually develops relationships with corporations and
other international non-profits that maintain staff overseas. Partners
serve as liaisons between MedShare and recipient facilities and
help shepherd MedShare containers to their remote destinations.
Recipient facilities must apply and be approved to receive donations,
which are supported by either sending medical teams to help or by
directly shipping a 40-foot container loaded with supplies, based
on specific needs. “Emory has consulted with us, volunteered
for us, sponsored us,
and has had [supplies] in just about every single container we have
shipped,” said Short.
Since MedShare’s inception, Emory Healthcare has collected
and donated more than 30,000 pounds of unused and surplus medical
equipment and supplies. In early 2007, Emory Healthcare heightened
awareness of the MedShare relationship and emphasized support. “Just
knowing our work force and culture, I knew we could do more with
this outreach,” said Emory Healthcare President and CEO John
Fox.
As a result of the employees’ enthusiasm and Fox’s commitment,
Emory Healthcare has had a 300-percent increase in collections.
“It gives Emory Healthcare staff an opportunity to work on
something meaningful together,” Fox said.
Emory Healthcare employees filled Saturday volunteer sign-up slots
so quickly some volunteers had to take a rain check to participate.
Daniel Martin, a surgical technician from Emory University Hospital,
has been a regular at MedShare’s Decatur warehouse. He is
able to offer his clinical expertise to help sort specialized surgical
equipment. “MedShare staff make you feel like what you’re
doing is important – not just busy work,” he said.
Martin said his volunteer work is meaningful as he gains better
insight into the struggles of those who lack resources. “It’s
good to know the supplies we are handling will help save lives,”
he said. Through Volunteer Emory, students like pre-med senior Tony
Longhini are also donating time and expertise. Longhini gave every
Friday afternoon of his junior year to the organization as he chauffeured
handfuls of Emory students on the Volunteer Emory bus, then spent
hours categorizing and boxing supplies for shipment.
“Students get as much as they give,” said Melody Porter,
director of Volunteer Emory. “The MedShare experience helps
students learn about surgery and about how medical supplies and
equipment are used. And it gives students an opportunity to get
outside of themselves and do something meaningful.”
A team of 12 Emory medical students got an opportunity to travel
to a remote rural area in Haiti’s Central Plateau region.
Before their journey, they visited MedShare to participate in a
sorting session and to “shop” for items they would take
to Haiti. Led by former Emory University Hospital emergency physician
Jason Prystowsky, Emory student physicians treated more than 2,000
people, some of whom waited more than eight hours in extreme heat
to receive care. Prystowsky hoped the young professionals would
“develop a lifelong commitment to serve those sick and injured
humans whose voice might not otherwise be heard.” As Emory
Healthcare pledged to increase support of MedShare’s mission,
they agreed to sponsor the cost to ship a container.
According to the Federal Ministry of Health, a woman dies every
10 minutes in Nigeria as a result of pregnancy and pregnancy-related
factors. In Nigeria, which has the second highest maternal death
during childbirth rate in the world, emergency obstetric care is
largely unavailable, so mothers die as a result of complications
like bleeding and eclampsia.
“We deliver an average of 1,200 babies annually, but we have
no means of monitoring pregnant women,” said Gershom Ejeckham,
a physician at Enugu State Hospital. “It’s amazing we
survive at all here,” he said.Emory Healthcare shipped a personalized
container to Nigeria in July stocked with medical supplies to help
reduce the number of maternal and infant deaths.
Rashel Stephenson is a freelance writer and
has worked in the Emory Healthcare community for 12 years.
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