Make this your homepage
 

Welcome: ART / ENTERTAINMENT | AUTOMOTIVE | BUSINESS | LIFESTYLE | HEALTH / MEDICAL | TECHNOLOGY | EDUCATION |

RSS
News Guide Page: HEALTH / MEDICAL: Infectious Diseases

American Podiatric Medical Association Podiatrists Perform Life-Saving Amputations in Haiti

29.01.2010 20:00
Limb removal surgery all too common since the disaster hit

Bethesda, MD January 29, 2010 -- When a devastating earthquake rocked a vulnerable Haiti on January 12, lives of numerous American podiatrists with ties to the country and its people were rocked too. For years, American Podiatric Medical Association (APMA) doctors have travelled to the diabetes plagued nation on a mission to save lower-limbs from amputation as a result of the disease. In fact, nearly seven percent of the estimated nine million Haitians have diabetes, and far too many don’t even know they have it. Ironically, APMA doctors, such as Patrick DeHeer, DPM, of Carmel, IN, who set up a diabetes wound care center in Port-au-Prince with the intent of preventing people’s legs, feet and toes from being amputated, this month found himself back in the devastated city to perform the surgery he tried so hard to avoid — amputations. He did it not because of diabetes, but in order to save lives.

It is chaos here—terrible injuries, people crushed, compartment syndromes—many of which are ending up in amputations. I just assisted on a below-the-knee amputation with an orthopedic surgeon on a 12-year-old girl. It is overwhelming. "It is chaos here — terrible injuries, people crushed, compartment syndromes — many of which are ending up in amputations," reported Dr. DeHeer, who served as a wound care director for a field hospital at a United Nations (UN) compound overseen by Project Medishare in Haiti’s capital city. "I just assisted on a below-the-knee amputation with an orthopedic surgeon on a 12-year-old girl. It is overwhelming."

This type of limb removal surgery, such as the one Dr. DeHeer described, has become all too common since the disaster hit. Infections, such as gangrene, have made amputations imminent without enough antibiotics and proper sterilization. The Pan American Health Organization reports there will be thousands of amputations in Haiti — and nearly half of the people impacted may lose more than one limb. Haiti’s high prevalence of diabetes and lack medicine to properly regulate the disease may only compound the amputation demand, as well as the need for expert podiatric care.

“It’s a tragedy that such an already fragile nation has to deal with such devastation and loss,” said APMA President Ronald D. Jensen, DPM. “As a podiatrist, I know first-hand how tragic it can be for a patient to lose a limb. There is a tremendous amount of help and support that the patient and their family require that is a challenge to provide in the best of circumstances. The people in Haiti will need help for a very long time.”

APMA podiatrists across the country continue to deploy to the shaken country to offer medical assistance. Only time will tell what toll the surge in amputations will have on the plight of the Haitian people.

To read more about APMA podiatrists’ missions to Haiti, visit www.apma.org.

Founded in 1912, the American Podiatric Medical Association (APMA) is the nation's leading and recognized professional organization for doctors of podiatric medicine (DPMs). DPMs are podiatric physicians and surgeons, also known as podiatrists, qualified by their education, training and experience to diagnose and treat conditions affecting the foot, ankle and related structures of the leg. The medical education and training of a DPM includes four years of undergraduate education, four years of graduate education at an accredited podiatric medical college and two or three years of hospital residency training. APMA has 53 state component locations across the United States and its territories, with a membership of close to 12,000 podiatrists. All practicing APMA members are licensed by the state in which they practice podiatric medicine. For more information, visit www.apma.org.

CONTACT:
Amie Hornbaker, APR
301.581.9221

 

Comments:

12.03.2010 | 20:17
category: HEALTH / MEDICAL : Infectious Diseases
PHFE dedicated its new board of directors suite in honor and memory of Annette T. Drake. Ms. Drake served as the Secretary of the PHFE Board of Directors until her untimely death in December 2009. Ms. Drakes children attended the ceremony at PHFE headquarters in City of Industry, California. March 12, 2010 -- At its regular February, 2010 meeting the board of directors of Public Health Foundation Enterprises, (PHFE), formally dedicated its recently constructed board of directors suite in honor and memory of Annette T. Drake.
The EcoFlex™ System on the Advenger® scrubber offers flexibility to meets healthcare standards for both green cleaning and clean floors.
02.03.2010 | 19:17
category: HEALTH / MEDICAL : Infectious Diseases
FacilityCare magazine recognizes Nilfisk-Advance for meeting the cleaning equipment needs of the healthcare industry Minneapolis March 2, 2010 -- Nilfisk-Advance, Inc., the world’s largest manufacturer of professional cleaning equipment, is pleased to announce that its Advance Advenger® with EcoFlex System has won FacilityCare magazine’s 2009 Top Product Award for Maintenance Management.The EcoFlex™ System on the Advenger® scrubber offers flexibility to meets healthcare standards for both green cleaning and clean floors.
News Image
02.03.2010 | 19:17
category: HEALTH / MEDICAL : Infectious Diseases
In any community of scientists, there are some who are bolder than most, who seek alternatives to existing paradigms because they perceive a path forward. Others will resist the alternative, which will be subject to scorn and scrutiny. In time, as the challenging paradigm is supported by additional evidence, it will replace the old paradigm, and a paradigm shift will have occurred. From: Thomas Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962).
Attorney Fred Pritzker
02.03.2010 | 08:17
category: HEALTH / MEDICAL : Infectious Diseases
Knowing quickly and exactly the origin of every pound of beef sold at checkout could help save lives when E. coli outbreaks happen because detailed records speed vital traceback investigations conducted by public health officials. "Tracebacks help us identify the products that are making people sick in order to bring outbreaks under control as quickly as possible,'' stated national food safety attorney Fred Pritzker. Minneapolis, Minn.
27.02.2010 | 13:25
category: HEALTH / MEDICAL : Infectious Diseases
Researchers at the Baltimore Veterans Affairs (VA) Medical Center and the University of Maryland School of Medicine have conducted a study on prion disease and found that transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) can be induced without an outside catalyst like a virus. TSE (also known as prion diseases) are a group of progressive conditions affecting the brain and nervous systems of many animals and humans.
Attorney Fred Pritzker
26.02.2010 | 00:17
category: HEALTH / MEDICAL : Infectious Diseases
Pritzker Olsen law firm has been retained to represent victims of a Salmonella Montevideo outbreak that has sickened at least 233 people in 44 states and the District of Columbia. Minneapolis, MN February 25, 2010 -- Pritzker Olsen law firm has been retained to represent victims of a Salmonella Montevideo outbreak that has sickened at least 233 people in 44 states and the District of Columbia.
23.02.2010 | 05:17
category: HEALTH / MEDICAL : Infectious Diseases
GIA announces the release of a comprehensive global report on Anti-Infectives market. The global anti-infectives market is projected to exceed $103 billion by the year 2015. Factors driving sales include introduction of novel therapeutics for drug-resistant bacteria, increasing incidence of severe fungal infections, potential launch of new antiviral agents, and introduction of new drugs in the HIV market.
The National Heart Truth Campaign
16.02.2010 | 19:51
category: HEALTH / MEDICAL : Infectious Diseases
The Institute of Women's Health of North America and its CEO and Chief Research Officer Dr. Abdul Rao have received funding from the Office on Women's Health, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services to participate The Heart Truth; a national awareness and prevention campaign about heart disease in women sponsored by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), part of the National Institutes of Health of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
© Copyright 2005-2010 NewsGuide.us. All rights reserved.