Saturday, March 29, 2008
Orthopedic surgeon heads up ministry to disabled children around the world - 1
By Michael Ireland
Chief Correspondent, ASSIST News Service
NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE (ANS) -- Scott Harrison is an orthopedic surgeon in the United States. For most of his professional career he was a professor of orthopedic surgery at Penn State’s medical school in Pennsylvania.
He told Peter Wooding, senior news editor of the United Kingdom-based UCB Radio at the recent NRB Convention in Nashville, Tennessee: "While I was doing that I was also going into the Third World, into the developing world, to teach orthopedic surgery to people and realized that there was an enormous unmet need for the disabled children of the world."
Harrison says that, "With a little research, I realized there were about 300 million disabled children in the world and there was no agency really attempting to cure these children. There were agencies that were trying to support them, but about 40 percent of those -- about 120 million children -- can be cured if someone just gets to them. So after some prayerful thought about this, we decided that we would create an organization that would at least in some way address the needs of these children.
"So we develop and build teaching hospitals so that we can train national doctors to do what needs to be done in their countries. But our hospitals will form a network around the world to bring care for these desperately needy children."
Wooding commented: "You could have carried on as a successful doctor leading a comfortable life. Were there some challenges involved when you made that transition?"
"My wife and I knew that our life would be very different than our friends. I laughingly say that my second home is the business lounge at Heathrow Airport, but it’s been a very satisfying life for us -- it challenges us in many ways. My first love is to care for children in a hands-on manner. As our organization has grown, we’re now in 13 different countries, my work is much more in the administrative role of organizing these hospitals, finding the countries, helping start the hospitals in the countries and -- so sadly -- I’m no longer a bedside surgeon, but it does have its own rewards as well."
Wooding said he understands that Harrison has carried out through his work 41,000 operations on these children. "How does it feel just with that vision to see so many lives impacted?"
"Well, it is very satisfying ; it’s very challenging to find the doctors and actually I guess it’s a reflection of the dynamic work that we’re doing the number is now approaching 47,000 children who have received surgical care and we’ve probably cared for over 700,000 children in a non-surgical way.
So how has Harrison been able to multiply that vision to enable that to happen?
"I think there are many people who perhaps hadn’t thought of exactly the same way I did, but once they see what it is we’re doing they’re drawn to this ministry. We have I think at least 1,200 employees now, many most of them working for maybe less than they could work in other industries. So it’s very helpful to see how people recognize that they can make a difference in the world by caring for these children. These are children without hope, but not without a future if we just do something to give them a chance. So we change lives physically and we change lives emotionally and spiritually as well in what we do."
Wooding said Harrison has established the work in some of the more unsettled areas of the world, like Afghanistan and Bethlehem. "Tell us about the works you’ve established there?"
"We went to Afghanistan in 2002 initially to start a children’s hospital and we realized that we were in the country probably at than point with the worst medical care in the world. One out of every eleven women would die in child birth in that country and probably at least 20 or 30 percent of the children born would not see their fifth birthday. So we realized that the problem was much bigger than just the disabled children in Afghanistan and so we eventually opened a hospital which gives care to the women who are pregnant and have difficult deliveries as well as their children, but we broadened that so that we could do teaching to many other areas of medicine, one of which is we’re the first place that does minimally invasive surgery so that we can introduce that form of care. We have a fellowship there for training the Afghan professors who will be staffing their medical school. We have a family practice residency there which is something they’d never had -- and again we’re really creating the people who will train the next echelon of doctors in Afghanistan. It’s a Muslim country; it is one which is very protective of their culture and we respect them for that. But as a western Christian non-profit we make no apology that that’s who we are and we try to remain culturally sensitive to their traditions but also have them understand that maybe the West isn’t exactly what they thought. There’s another face to the west that they haven’t seen and to this point we have been well received by the people in the country. And as I told the minister of health when we started this we would only commit to a hundred years and at that point we would have to re-evaluate if we would stay longer."
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