By Duke Medicine News and Communications
Nigeria has more than 146 million people but just one
primitive drill for use in head and neck surgeries. There are
none to help train future surgeons.
Things soon will change significantly, thanks to a Duke
Medicine donation of eight surgical drills to a hospital in
Lagos.
"I think it will have a huge impact," said David M. Kaylie, MD,
associate professor of surgery in the Division of
Otolaryngology. "These drills will allow them to do surgery
that they have not been able to do. They will also be able to
have a lab to teach neurosurgery and otolaryngology
residents."
"We are grateful for Duke Medicine's generosity," said
Okezie Obasi Kanu, MD, FWACS, consultant neurosurgeon at
Lagos University Teaching Hospital. "The drills will be shared
with Nkiru Asoegwu, MD, FWACS, consultant
otorhinolaryngologist, and will significantly enhance our
ability to treat patients and train future surgeons in both
neurosurgery and neuro-otology."
Duke learned of the situation recently when Kanu spent three
months here working with Allan H. Friedman, MD, chief of
neurosurgery. Asoegwu is coming to Duke for three months
starting in February to work with Kaylie.
Word of the Nigerian need came at a time when the Duke
Divisions of Otolaryngology and Neurosurgery had moved into
larger, renovated lab space for teaching temporal bone surgery.
With the new space came new equipment donated by surgical drill
maker Anspach, freeing the eight drills for Nigeria.
"Drs. Kanu and Asoegwu told us that there is only one
surgical drill in the entire country," Kaylie said. "They are
doing brain surgery and ear surgery with very primitive tools,
and they are not able to teach their residents temporal bone
dissection because there are no drills in the country for
surgery, let alone the lab. This makes it very difficult for
them to do complex neurosurgery and otology cases. It is
amazing to me that the equipment we will donate can be so
beneficial to these doctors in Nigeria."
The drills should be shipped next week and arrive by
Christmas, Kaylie said.
In the summer of 2007, Duke Medicine neurosurgeons donated
equipment and expertise to a hospital in Kampala, Uganda. The
team returned in the summer of 2008 for a followup visit. Also
in the summer of 2008, Duke Medicine donated medical supplies
to help hospitals and health centers in China in their ongoing
efforts to treat earthquake victims.