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PALS Santa Rosa de Copan

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Human cutaneous myiasis: a review and report of three cases due to Dermatobia hominis. Clin Exp Dermatol. 1987;12:40-45. 4. Elgart ML. Flies and myiasis. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PALS Santa Rosa de Copan


1
PALSSanta Rosa de Copan
  • Central American Medical Outreach
  • CAMO
  • Hospital Regional de Occidente
  • February 25-28, 2008

2
PALS
  • Objective To teach Pediatric Advanced Life
    Support to a group of medical professionals in
    Santa Rosa de Copan
  • Students came from many areas of Honduras
    including Tegucigalpa, Gracias, Santa Rosa de
    Copan, and Cesamo San Jose Copan

3
Map of Honduras
4
The Hospital
5
Classrooms were housed in the Hospital Regional
de Occidente
6
Class list Group A
  • Clara Lainez, MD Instituto Hondureno Seguro
    Social (IHSS)
  • Thunia Fancinily, MD IHSS
  • Alma Rodriguez, MD Hospital Regional Occidente (
    HRO)
  • Yadira Carcamo, MD Hospital Gracias
  • Nelson Penman, MD HRO
  • Jorge Madunado, MD HRO
  • Hector Sandoval, MD HRO

7
Class list Group B
  • Jeanette Flores, MD Cesamo San Jose Copan
  • Gloria Cacenes, MD Cesamo San Jose Copan
  • Claudia Calix, MD Hospital Gracias
  • Sonia Delattibodier, MD HRO
  • Marisabel Rivera, MD HRO
  • Marco Rodriguez, Paramedico, Santa Rosa de Copan

8
Map of Honduras
SRDC, Gracias, Tegucigalpa
9
The Faculty
  • Carlos Delgado, MD Emory University, Atlanta,
    Georgia
  • David Goo, MD - Emory University, Atlanta,
    Georgia
  • Alex Rogers, MD - University of Michigan, Ann
    Arbor, Michigan
  • Ricardo Jimenez, MD All Childrens Hospital, St.
    Petersburg, Florida

10
The Faculty
11
Faculty
12
The Course
  • The PALS video was shown and translated into
    Spanish, pausing the video while discussion and
    translation occurred
  • Skills station checklists were checked off and
    signed by the instructors
  • Shock lecture was given in Spanish
  • Dysrhythmia lecture was translated into Spanish

13
Skills Stations
14
Skills stations
15
Skills Stations
  • Skills stations
  • BLS
  • 1 person 302
  • 2 Person 152
  • AED
  • Airway
  • Defibrillator
  • Dysrhythmias

16
Presenting the Video
17
Intra-osseous Lecture
18
Intra-osseous station
19
Where to decompress a pneumothorax?
20
Defibrillator Station
21
Guest LecturerNatalie (Anesthesiologist at
Hospital Occidente)
22
DOPE Pneumonic En Espangnol
  • Desplazamiento
  • Obstruccion
  • Pneumotorax
  • Equipo

23
Shock Lecture
24
Assess-Categorize-Decide-Act
25
Testing Scenarios
26
Las Drogas
27
Teaching
28
The Broselow Tape
29
Working the Megacode
30
Megacode
31
Clinical Testing
  • All participants passed the megacode.
  • A few clinical deficiencies were identified and
    corrected.

32
Thanks to the CAMO support staff
  • Organization of participants
  • Course Manuals
  • Preparation of mannequins and all the many
    supplies for airway, BLS, AED, etc
  • Copies of materials and tests
  • Snacks, coffee, lunch
  • Chicken legs for the intr-osseus skills station

33
CAMO Organization of Equipment
34
CAMO Support Staff
35
Lunch and Snacks
36
The Written Test
37
Written Testing
  • Pre-test and discussion were translated into
    Spanish
  • Actual test was in Spanish
  • 7 out of the 13 passed on the first try (Passing
    grade of 84)
  • 2 missed just one extra question (80)
  • Most were with in two questions (76)

38
Remediation
39
Remediation
  • Tests were graded and key points were reviewed
    without answering the actual questions on the
    test.
  • Participants were re-tested and all passed
    successfully

40
Lunch post testing
41
Graduation
  • 13 Medical Professionals successfully finished
    the new PALS course
  • Continued objectives will be to return and in
    time teach instructors and have a sustainable
    PALS class here in Santa Rosa de Copan

42
Success!
43
Faculty Organization
44
Accomplishments
  • Four pediatric emergency medicine attendings from
    3 different hospitals around the US successfully
    put on a PALS course in Spanish
  • The trip was self funded with the cooperation of
    CAMO a large non-profit group in Honduras
  • Faculty preparation and teaching time as well as
    some equipment were donated to the course and
    hospital.

45
In kind course donations
46
Central American Medical Outreach
47
About CAMO
  • CAMO has been serving Central America since 1993.
  • CAMO's founder, Kathryn Tschiegg, RN served as a
    Peace Corps volunteer in Honduras.      
  • Kathy returned to Honduras with a team of
    physicians and technicians from the United States
    in early 1992. 
  • In 1993 she founded CAMO to provide medical
    supplies, equipment and education to hospitals
    and clinics in Central America. 

48
CAMO
  • At present, CAMO serves over 67,000 people a year
    in Central America
  • Receives over 2million dollars in donated
    supplies, time and financial contributions.   
  • A distribution center was built in Honduras in
    2003 and is now operated by CAMOs Central
    American counterpart Fundación CAMO. 
  • Fundación CAMO serves as CAMO USAs local partner
    and conduit to the community. 

49
Equipment
  • Each year has seen an increase in the size and
    the number of specialty teams and an increase in
    the amount of medical equipment integrated into
    the public health system.
  • All equipment provided by CAMO is technically
    sound and in good working order.  This equipment
    would be or has been discarded in the United
    States. 

50
Sustainability
  • CAMO trains Honduran public health staff to use
    the donated equipment through the efforts of
    licensed medical professionals from the United
    States who donate their time and services to 
    Central American hospitals and clinics. 
  • These medical teams travel with the sole purpose
    of integrating medical equipment and technology
    into the daily workings of these facilities and
    training the Central American staff to use their
    new skills after the U.S. teams leave.

51
CAMO Programs
  • Capital Improvements in Medical Facilities    
  • Dental Program    
  • Wheelchair Repair and Distribution    
  • Surgical Development Orthopedics, Plastics, Eye,
    and Urology    
  • Prosthetic Lab    
  • MMERV Program    
  • Medical Education    
  • Technical School    
  • Research and Development    
  • Community Center/Gym    
  • Audiometry    
  • Multidisciplinary Breast Clinic    
  • Eye Clinic    
  • Day Care Center

52
Medical Education
  • Educational Programs Currently Running
    Respiratory care and equipment Neonatal care
    NALS ACLS CPR OB/GYN Laboratory and
    X-ray Emergency medical services Dentistry
    and orthodontics Mammography related areas
  • Now PALS

53
Accountability
  • Where Does the Money Go? With the extensive
    network of volunteers and in-kind contributions
    CAMO is able to get 7 dollars worth of work and
    equipment out of very 1 donated enabling CAMO
    to give the money to those who need it most.

54
Volunteer Costs Time and
  • It costs about 1,000 per team member for a week
    in Honduras
  • Medical professionals donate their time with the
    understanding that they participate in an ongoing
    program which might require  a commitment of 1 -2
    weeks per year for five years.
  • PALS will probably take three to four trips to
    accomplish the goal of a self-sustaining course

55
Hospital Grounds
56
Surgery and Womens Surgery
57
Emergency Room
58
Ambulance Area
59
Old Pediatric Area
60
Outside Old Pediatric Ward
61
Current Pediatric Ward
62
Nursing Station
63
Pharmacy
64
Enfermera Preparing Meds
65
Penicillin Test Dose
66
Rounding with the Pediatricians
67
Radiology and Chart Filing Systemin the Patients
Bedspace (Chair)
68
Reviewing X-rays
69
Chest X Ray? Pneumothorax
70
Femoral Cutdown
71
Femoral Cutdown
  • Done at bedside
  • Pediatrician on call, covers ER, Nursery, and
    Inpatient wards
  • Used a 10 French feeding tube cut off at an acute
    angle and inserted into the femoral vein after
    nicking.
  • Vessel then ligated and feeding tube tied in.

72
Intubated in General PediatricWard
73
Mother with Ventilated Child
74
Hospital Occidente
  • 18 month old female with a history of one week of
    eye swelling.
  • No fever
  • No history of trauma
  • No pertinent past medical history

75
Hospital Occidente
  • ?

76
Bot Fly Pathology
  • Ophthalmomyiasis refers to the invasion of the
    lids, conjunctiva, cornea, and rarely the orbit
    or globe of the mammalian eye by fly larvae
    (order Diptera) .1
  • The human botfly (D hominis) is the most common
    cause of cutaneous myiasis in Central and South
    America, but few cases of external
    ophthalmomyiasis and no previous case to our
    knowledge of orbital invasion have been
    reported.2

1. Savino DF, Margo CE, McCoy ED, Friedl FE.
Dermal myiasis of the eyelid. Ophthalmology.
1986931225-1227. 2. Wilhelmus KR. Myiasis
palpebrarum. Am J Ophthalmol. 1986101496-498.
ambergriscaye.com/pages/town/botfly2.html
77
The Bot Fly
  • Scientific classification
  • Kingdom AnimaliaPhylum
    ArthropodaClass InsectaOrder
    DipteraSuborder BrachyceraInfraorder
    MuscomorphaSection SchizophoraSubsection
    CalyptrataeSuperfamily OestroideaFamily
    Oestridae

http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Botfly
78
The Human Bot Fly
79
Bot Fly Pathology
  • The female botfly glues her eggs onto the abdomen
    of a captured mosquito or other common fly.
  • When the carrier insect lands on a human, the
    larva, or bot, hatches, burrows into the skin,
    and positions itself "head down" to feed,
    breathing through caudal respiratory spiracles.

ambergriscaye.com/pages/town/botfly2.html
80
Bot Fly Pathology
  • The larva withdraws through a central punctum,
    falling to the ground and pupating before
    emerging as a mature botfly.3
  • Chloroform or lidocaine to anesthetize the bot
    may facilitate surgical removal as does occluding
    the breathing hole with ointment, beeswax,
    chewing gum, or pork fat.4

3. Lane RP, Lowell CR, Griffiths WA, Sonnex TS.
Human cutaneous myiasis a review and report of
three cases due to Dermatobia hominis. Clin Exp
Dermatol. 19871240-45. 4. Elgart ML. Flies and
myiasis. Dermatol Clin. 19908237-244.
ambergriscaye.com/pages/town/botfly2.html
81
Human Bot Fly
ambergriscaye.com/pages/town/botfly2.html
82
Human Bot Fly
ambergriscaye.com/pages/town/botfly2.html
83
NICU
84
Pediatric Interns in the NICU
85
Premature Infant
86
Hospital Occidente
  • Macrosomia
  • Edema
  • Respiratory Failure
  • Shock
  • Breathing over ventilator

87
NICU Flowsheet
  • Dobutamine
  • Albumin
  • Furosemide
  • Hydrocortisone
  • Ciprofloxacin
  • Clindamycin
  • Fluconazole
  • Midazolam
  • Fentanyl
  • Albuterol/Atrovent
  • D10 NS

88
Delayed Capillary Refill Time
89
Post Bolus Improvement in CRT
90
Delivery Room
91
Resuscitation Equipment Delivery Room
92
Delivery Area - Nursery
93
ONLY Breast Feed!
94
Breast Feeding Teaching Area
95
Lecture to Pediatric Housestaff
96
Benefits
  • Cultural exchange
  • Teaching
  • Potential collaboration in the future
  • Exposes us to the limitations of medical practice
    in other parts of the world
  • Enlightens us about how our counterparts work
    internationally
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