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Posts Tagged ‘Healing Power’

May 26th, 2009

Dr. Maria Siemionow - Leader of the First U.S. Face Transplant

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Dr. Maria Siemionow

Dr. Maria Siemionow

“How do you determine the value of a face? Imagine, for a moment, being unable to touch the face of someone you love. Now you are beginning to grasp something of the burden a disfigured person carries,” asserts Dr. Maria Siemionow in her book Transplanting a Face: Notes on a Life in Medicine.

True to her beliefs, Siemionow led a team of doctors in the first U.S. face transplant, a bold and controversial operation. It took twenty-two hours for the doctors to replace 80 percent of the patient’s disfigured face with bone, muscles, nerves, skin and blood vessels taken from a woman who had died hours earlier. The procedure exemplified the courage of Dr. Siemionow in facing the challenge of this enormous medical advance as well as confronting the ethical questions it raised.

As a recipient of America’s Top Doctor Award according to Vitals, Siemionow received her medical degree by the Poznan Medical Academy in 1974 and then earned her PhD in microsurgery. Since 1995 she has been the Director of Plastic Surgery Research and Head of Microsurgery Training at The Cleveland Clinic. She is also the first U.S. physician to receive Institutional Review Board approval for facial transplantation surgery.

Siemionow spent years practicing the procedures on animals and cadavers in order to perfect her technique. It took her four years to choose the right candidate, Connie Culp, a 46 year old whose face was shattered by a gunshot and could no longer breathe on her own, eat solid food or even smile.

Although the procedure is considered groundbreaking, it raises many ethical questions. Unlike operations which involve vital organs such as hearts and livers, transplants of faces are done to improve the quality of life rather than to extend it. Patients run the risk of deadly complications and the medical team must be prepared for the possibility of tissue rejections which could lead to serious problems for the recipient.

For Connie, the transplant has restored her life in countless ways. She can now eat her favorite foods and drink coffee out of a cup instead of receiving nourishment through a tube. Touching her face she can identify her nose and jaw, and most significantly was able to feel her grandson’s kiss for the first time.

“We know there are so many patients in their homes hiding from society because they are afraid to walk to the grocery store, they are afraid to go to the street,” says Siemionow. “Our patient was called names and was humiliated.”

One of the biggest gifts Dr. Maria Sienionow hopes she’s given Connie is the ability to walk down a crowded street and be ignored.

CLICK HERE FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON DR. MARIA SIEMIONOW.

Wall Street Journal

Wall Street Journal

AP

AP

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May 14th, 2009

Doctors Bartering Healthcare in a Struggling Economy

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Dr. Brent Wakefield and Dr. Brian Lewis

Dr. Brent Wakefield and Dr. Brian Lewis

Back in the day, you got what you needed by exchanging tobacco for deerskin, spices for silks or cows for horses. And who can forget Esau trading his firstborn rights for a bowl of lentils, learning the hard way that even in the bible bartering means no backsies?

When Dr. Brent Wakefield and Dr. Brian Lewis opened their family practice in Jenks, Oklahoma, they turned to this centuries-old way of doing business. Bartering kept them solvent during the lean years and created options for patients strapped for cash.

Rather than bartering directly with their patients, they joined a barter exchange. These are companies which set up an equivalent cash value for goods and services, and have members who list what they could contribute to a trade. But swapping cattle and spitting tobacco no longer means you’ve sealed the deal. The Internal Revenue Service has strict rules and regulations that need to be followed and expects scrupulous documentation of all the transactions.

The doctors traded medical services for office supplies, plumbing work and even dinners in restaurants which they’ve given to employees as bonuses. Keeping track of how much they bring in and how much they’re able to use is essential for making the system work.

One of the biggest advantages when becoming a member of a bartering exchange is how it increases the visibility of doctors to all the people in their network. Patients who have limited insurance or no insurance at all are given the opportunity to see doctors normally unavailable to them.

Drs Wakefield and Lewis are among a growing group of physicians who have discovered a creative option which has the potential of transforming healthcare from an unaffordable luxury to a necessity within reach.

LEARN MORE ABOUT DR. BRENT WAKEFIELD AND DR. BRIAN LEWIS.

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April 21st, 2009

Dr. Dustin Ballard is Seeking a Cure for Gun Violence

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Dr. Dustin Ballard

Dr. Dustin Ballard

The tragic Binghamton shooting, which occurred April third claiming thirteen lives and leaving two seriously wounded, is the most recent mass murder committed in our country. Dr. Dustin Ballard, an emergency physician in Northern California, advocates treating gun violence as a health issue rather than a political one.

“Experts in the field have long argued that bullets should be viewed as pathogens- like bacteria or tumors.  If one views the problem through this lens, targeted restrictions are preventative medicine, rather than an affront on personal liberty,” he asserts in his Medically Clear Column which appears in the “Marin Independent Journal” published in Marin County, California.

According to Vitals, Dr. Ballard received his MD from the University of Pennsylvania and completed his residency training in emergency medicine at UC Davis Medical Center in Sacramento, California.  As an emergency doctor he treated countless victims of violent crimes and the devastation left him marked forever.  He poured his feelings into a book, The Bullet’s Yaw: Reflections on Violence, Healing and an Unforgettable Stranger, which was published in December of 2007.

This book is a memoir of one of his patients who taught him about life, violence and healing. During a vengeful rampage a deranged security guard fired a bullet into a truck. The bullet’s path deviated, instead entering his patient and causing massive injuries. The phenomenon, which ballistics experts refer to as “the bullet’s yaw,” is the perfect metaphor illustrating the randomness of violence and its tragic toll on innocent victims here and all over the world.

Learn more about Dr. Dustin Ballard for Free.

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April 7th, 2009

Dr. Abraham Verghese – The Healing Power of Stories

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Author and Doctor - Abraham Verghese. The Healing Power of Stories

Dr. Abraham Verghese

Dr. Abraham Verghese

Dr Abraham Verghese, an internist and pulmonologist, was born and raised in Ethiopia.  He was forced to leave his country when he was eighteen because of political unrest and being an expatriate always haunted him. He discovered that the act of telling and hearing his patients’ stories awakened his sense of self and more importantly, made him a more effective physician.

His training in infectious diseases exposed him to the first epidemic of urban AIDs, which affected him deeply. His patients were expatriates like himself, rejected by society because of prejudice and ignorance. He spent much time at their bedsides and found it unfathomable that doctors as a rule barely talked to their patients.

The flawed hospital system and the suffering of his patients began to overwhelm him, and writing became his salvation. He received an MFA from the Iowa Writer’s Workshop and published his first memoir, “My Own Country,” which was nominated for the National Book Critics Circle Award.  The book chronicles the appearance of AIDs in Tennessee, intertwining the lives of his patients and his own personal struggles.

This winter he published his first novel, “Cutting for Stone,” which received a starred review from Publisher’s Weekly and praise from The New Yorker, The Washington Post and People Magazine, to name a few.

His commitment to bedside medicine has been far-reaching. He is the founding director of the Center of Medical Humanities and Ethics in Texas and is presently a tenured professor at Stanford.  His writing and work continue to prove that instead of focusing on the patient data on the computer, listening to the patient in the bed has the power to cure.

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