Guest entry by Jeffrey Henry, Medweb Engineer in Port-a-Prince, Haiti (Tuesday, February 16, 2010)
I’m about to change someone’s world by printing them a 180 page X-ray user manual. He will be an X-ray tech the rest of his life, and probably be able to provide a much better home for his wife and child because of it.
In my not so humble opinion, this trip has been a resounding success. Ever since I set up the view station right next to the Medweb, the doctors have been running back and forth non stop from their patient to the PACS view station. It was awesome to see this. The Medweb PACS has truly helped people get their studies read in a timely fashion; it has enabled them to compare old X-rays to new ones, determine the rate at which people are healing, and decide if they can be discharged. I’m confident Medweb’s donation has helped reduce the length of time people are suffering, and has helped save some peoples lives.
I helped my new Haitian friend Fetner send all the old studies needed by the doctors one image at a time for review.
Before I leave, I am going to print out 1 copy of the Medweb plug-in user manual and staple it together and leave it near the View station for incoming doctors when I am not here. Come to think of it, I should train Fetner to train the Haitian docs. I love how things work out sometimes.
I definitely miss my home, friends and coworkers. If we are coming here on another trip, I will help make a drive to get donations. I cannot stress to you enough how much is needed here.
-Jeffery Henry

Showing posts with label xray. Show all posts
Showing posts with label xray. Show all posts
Friday, February 19, 2010
Making a difference in Haiti...
Labels:
EMF,
Haiti,
PACS,
telemedcine,
teleradiology,
training,
xray
PACS up and running in Haiti!
A Guest Entry from Jeffrey Henry, Medweb Engineer in Haiti (Monday, February 15, 2010)
The Univ. of Miami Medishare hospital has been running X-rays non-stop. I was able to get a view station set-up next the X-ray station in the adult tent. A local arrived who was trained in the machine and can take the X-rays and scan in the cartridges. The traffic here at the hospital has picked up. We are full; the massive rain last night caused schools to collapse and some people came in with major issues.
I have to say, the trip thru town was atrocious; the city is non-stop rubble with a lot of people living in tents made of bed sheets. The international response is everywhere, but at the same time, seemingly minimal. Every country with the capability to do so has sent something, but nothing comes close to the US presence.
I also got some great intel on how the medical efforts are going and where the needs are most vital and how this Medweb server in particular could be used most efficiently.
When I got back to the Miami Medishare facility, one of my laptops had been liberated and hooked up to a projector in the kids' tent to show a French version of Peter Pan. You just can't get "mad" though - these poor kids just tug at your heart and if a little bit of relief in a movie that tells them it's ok to not have to grow up overnight - then that's a part of why we are here, too. There is still another view station in this room. I will leave my tough book here with a user account for Medweb viewing and I will give the password to the docs who need it.
Tonight my to-do list is to send 37 studies from X-ray to PACS so they can compare priors and secure view station, setup near X-ray machine so the doctors can read NEAR the X-ray machine for faster reads.
As I was writing, I was interrupted by a doc who needed to read. Patient had a femur fracture that they patched up and put a cast on and were ready to discharge. They were very happy.
The Univ. of Miami Medishare hospital has been running X-rays non-stop. I was able to get a view station set-up next the X-ray station in the adult tent. A local arrived who was trained in the machine and can take the X-rays and scan in the cartridges. The traffic here at the hospital has picked up. We are full; the massive rain last night caused schools to collapse and some people came in with major issues.
I have to say, the trip thru town was atrocious; the city is non-stop rubble with a lot of people living in tents made of bed sheets. The international response is everywhere, but at the same time, seemingly minimal. Every country with the capability to do so has sent something, but nothing comes close to the US presence.
I also got some great intel on how the medical efforts are going and where the needs are most vital and how this Medweb server in particular could be used most efficiently.
When I got back to the Miami Medishare facility, one of my laptops had been liberated and hooked up to a projector in the kids' tent to show a French version of Peter Pan. You just can't get "mad" though - these poor kids just tug at your heart and if a little bit of relief in a movie that tells them it's ok to not have to grow up overnight - then that's a part of why we are here, too. There is still another view station in this room. I will leave my tough book here with a user account for Medweb viewing and I will give the password to the docs who need it.
Tonight my to-do list is to send 37 studies from X-ray to PACS so they can compare priors and secure view station, setup near X-ray machine so the doctors can read NEAR the X-ray machine for faster reads.
As I was writing, I was interrupted by a doc who needed to read. Patient had a femur fracture that they patched up and put a cast on and were ready to discharge. They were very happy.
Labels:
EMF,
Haiti,
PACS,
telemedicine,
teleradiology,
xray
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