Login
Site Search
Subscribe
Modify
Home >
List Archives
Nepal: Do a Small Thing, Make a Big Difference
krin135 at aol.com krin135 at aol.comThu Sep 7 23:03:19 BST 2006
- Previous message: Nepal: Do a Small Thing, Make a Big Difference
- Next message: Nepal: Do a Small Thing, Make a Big Difference
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
Dr. Cobb: I've taken the liberty of forwarding your message to the Medical Amateur Radio Council's mailing list for forwarding to the Medishare International program. Hopefully, someone over on that list can also help with your needs. ck Charles S. Krin, DO FAAFP, KC5EVN -----Original Message----- From: drbriannepal at yahoo.co.in To: trauma-list at trauma.org Sent: Thu, 7 Sep 2006 6:12 AM Subject: Nepal: Do a Small Thing, Make a Big Difference Dear Colleague, Nepal is one of the poorest countries in the world, with a per capita GDP of $240 per year and horrendous maternal and child mortality. It is just emerging from a civil war. The medical care sector is small and most people have no access to doctors or nurses. I'm an emergency physician and professor at B P Koirala Institute of Medical Sciences in Dharan, the largest hospital and foremost health professions university in the country. Our ED is very busy, filled with extremely sick, badly injured and very poor people. We get very little funding, as we are a government institution. We have almost no equipment and no ambulances. I'm starting programs to train emergency nurses, paramedics and physicians and my trainees are bright and eager. If any of you have any used but serviceable equipment or supplies--even disposables like ambu bags, cervical collars, staplers, etc--please contact me. Of course we could really use some outdated but still functional monitors, oximeters, ultrasound machines, practically anything. If anyone wants to volunteer helping these friendly, gentle people and training young professionals in a beautiful subtropical landscape at the foot of the Himalayan range, contact me. Thanks for your help. Brian Cobb, MD Professor of Emergency Medicine drbriannepal at yahoo.co.in Prof. Brian Cobb, M.D. Emergency and Critical Care Medicine Cowardice asks the question - is it safe? Expediency asks the question - is it politic? Vanity asks the question - is it popular? But conscience asks the question - is it right? And there comes a time when one must take a position that is neither safe, nor politic, nor popular; but one must take it because it is right. --Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. --------------------------------- Here's a new way to find what you're looking for - Yahoo! Answers Send FREE SMS to your friend's mobile from Yahoo! Messenger Version 8. Get it NOW -- trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: http://www.trauma.org/traumalist.html ________________________________________________________________________ Check out AOL.com today. Breaking news, video search, pictures, email and IM. All on demand. Always Free.
- Previous message: Nepal: Do a Small Thing, Make a Big Difference
- Next message: Nepal: Do a Small Thing, Make a Big Difference
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the trauma-list mailing list
