Volume 26 No. 4 April 2002

VA study points to higher fitness levels as predictor of longer life

New leaders named to emergency medicine residency program

Competency.pdf

Walker pleads not guilty

Medical center team needs help exporting hope at 11,000 feet

Bioterrorism plan widely available

Match Day 2002

Medical center team needs help exporting hope at 11,000 feet

Gary Heit, assistant professor of neurosurgery, first learned of the dire need for neurosurgeons in Peru from his sister who lives there. So when the Peruvian Ministry of Health asked him to help, he jumped at the chance.

On May 18, Heit and 13 other doctors, nurses and surgical technologists will set off on a journey to Cuzco, Peru, to give 10 days of their time to those in need.

"Kids are dying from hydrocephalus because they don't have shunts," Heit said. Hydrocephalus occurs when the flow of cerebral spinal fluid from the brain is blocked. Left untreated, the disorder leads to extreme pressure on the brain, mental disturbance, and even death.

Neurosurgeons, like Heit, treat the disease by inserting a shunt, allowing fluid to drain from the head to other parts of the body where it can be absorbed.

Heit and his volunteer medical team will face numerous obstacles in Peru. "We won't have many things we normally take for granted," he said. "The operating room may be substandard, and we'll likely have to reuse supplies."

Heit hopes his team can treat as many as 60 children who would otherwise die of hydrocephalus, and to train doctors there to treat others. But, their success depends in large part on the supplies they gather now through donations from the community. To donate, contact Gary Heit at gheit@stanford.edu.




-While neurosurgeon Gary Heit's humanitarian trip to mountainous Cuzco, Peru, is about a month away, his team's potential success depends in large measure on donations they receive today. Everything from medical supplies to cash is needed.