Mobile Surgical Team, Honduras, MEDEL, Joint Task Force-Bravo, Humanitarian, Medical Assistance
U.S. Army Lt. Col. (Dr.) James Smith, Joint Task Force-Bravo Medical Element general surgeon, performs surgery on a patient during a MEDEL Mobile Surgical Team operation at the Dr. Salvador Paredes Hospital in Trujillo, Honduras, July 28, 2016. The MST performed 11 surgeries during the team’s three-day operation in Trujillo.
Mobile Surgical Team, Honduras, MEDEL, Joint Task Force-Bravo, Humanitarian, Medical Assistance
Members of the Joint Task Force-Bravo Medical Element Mobile Surgical Team intubate a patient during a MEDEL MST operation at the Dr. Salvador Paredes Hospital in Trujillo, Honduras, July 28, 2016. The patients treated by the MST during this operation in Trujillo were first screened by the doctors of the Dr. Salvador Paredes Hospital and recommended for the surgeries based on the severity of their injuries, how long they've had the problem, and lack of means to pay for the surgeries.
Mobile Surgical Team, Honduras, MEDEL, Joint Task Force-Bravo, Humanitarian, Medical Assistance
Members of the Joint Task Force-Bravo Medical Element Mobile Surgical Team perform an open cholecystectomy on a patient during a MEDEL MST operation at the Dr. Salvador Paredes Hospital in Trujillo, Honduras, July 28, 2016. The MST is a self-sustaining unit that utilizes their own equipment and operates out of various facilities throughout Honduras to provide free surgeries to patients in need.
Mobile Surgical Team, Honduras, MEDEL, Joint Task Force-Bravo, Humanitarian, Medical Assistance
U.S. Army Lt. Col. (Dr.) James Smith, Joint Task Force-Bravo Medical Element general surgeon, performs surgery on a patient during a MEDEL MST operation at the Dr. Salvador Paredes Hospital in Trujillo, Honduras, July 28, 2016. Members of the current MST rotation have now operated on patients in six different hospitals in Honduras and sees patients twice a week in La Paz.
Mobile Surgical Team, Honduras, MEDEL, Joint Task Force-Bravo, Humanitarian, Medical Assistance
U.S. Army Lt. Col. Catherine Devito, Joint Task Force-Bravo Medical Element certified registered nurse anesthetist, monitors a patient’s airway during a MEDEL Mobile Surgical Team operation at the Dr. Salvador Paredes Hospital in Trujillo, Honduras, July 28, 2016. The current MST rotation has performed more than 180 surgeries throughout Honduras.
Mobile Surgical Team, Honduras, MEDEL, Joint Task Force-Bravo, Humanitarian, Medical Assistance
U.S. Navy Lt. Pierre Cagniart, Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force flight surgeon, prepares to perform a spinal on a patient during a Joint Task Force-Bravo Medical Element Mobile Surgical Team operation at the Dr. Salvador Paredes Hospital in Trujillo, Honduras, July 28, 2016. The MST performed 11 surgeries during the team’s three-day operation in Trujillo.
Mobile Surgical Team, Honduras, MEDEL, Joint Task Force-Bravo, Humanitarian, Medical Assistance
The Joint Task Force-Bravo Medical Element's Mobile Surgical Team completed 11 surgeries at the Dr. Salvador Paredes Hospital in Trujillo, Honduras from July 27-29, 2016. The MST is a self-sustaining unit that utilizes their own equipment and operates out of various facilities throughout Honduras to provide free surgeries to patients in need.
By Staff Sgt. Siuta B. Ika / Published Aug. 11, 2016
COLÓN, Honduras,
The Joint Task Force-Bravo Medical Element's Mobile Surgical Team completed 11 surgeries at the Dr. Salvador Paredes Hospital in Trujillo, Honduras from July 27-29.
The MST is a self-sustaining unit that utilizes their own equipment and operates out of various facilities throughout Honduras to provide free surgeries to patients in need.
The patients treated by the MST during this operation in Trujillo were first screened by the doctors of the Dr. Salvador Paredes Hospital and recommended for the surgeries based on the severity of their injuries, how long they've had the problem, and lack of means to pay for the surgeries.
"We did a few different types of surgeries, but typically we do open gallbladder removals and hernia repairs," said U.S. Army Capt. Denise Sons, MEDEL perioperative nurse and the MST-Colón officer in charge. "Everything went really well and it feels good to be able to help like this because a lot of the patients have been waiting to have surgery done for months, and in some cases, years."
Members of the current MST rotation have now operated on patients in six different hospitals in Honduras and see patients twice a week in La Paz. All of the patients the MST operates on are chosen by the local hospitals and their providers based on their own unique set of determining factors, to include the local hospital staff's ability to provide follow-up care.
"Since February we've averaged about 30 surgeries a month," said U.S. Army Lt. Col. (Dr.) James Smith, MEDEL general surgeon. "We never operate without a Honduran surgeon present, so that goes a long way in the exchange of medical information and new medical ideas and technology. And it’s not only them learning things from us, we learn a lot from them because they are masters at providing superb healthcare with very meager resources.”
Although the current MST staff is two-thirds of the way through their deployment to Honduras, each of them look forward to positively impacting the lives of more than one hundred future patients and their families.
"We’re not kidding ourselves about being the only medical team that comes to Honduras, we’re a very small drop in the ocean when it comes to the doctors here and the Honduran health care service," Smith said. "But I couldn't be happier to be here and be able to provide the services that we provide."