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Advanced Life Support System at Health City saves visitor’s life

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Cayman Islands, August 28, 2017 – A family vacation in a tropical paradise turned into a life or death situation for Surjeet Kaur when an unexpected viral infection became a critical health emergency.

Advanced life support technology at Health City Cayman Islands, a tertiary care hospital located in East End, Grand Cayman, saved her life.   Health City is the only medical center in the Caribbean region offering the life-saving service, called extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO).

A stomach virus resulted in myocarditis for Kaur, who was visiting her son in the Cayman Islands from India.   Myocarditis is an inflammation of the heart muscle caused by various infections or drug toxicity.   In severe cases this can lead to heart failure and death.

Kaur was ill for five days with the viral illness, and initially on admission to a local primary care hospital her organs were showing good functionality.   However, her condition deteriorated significantly and quickly less than 24 hours later.

Her son, Simranjit Singh, who lives and works in the Cayman Islands, received a call from the hospital at 2 a.m. saying his mother was in critical condition.

Rushed by ambulance to Health City Cayman Islands, Mrs. Kaur was placed on ECMO life support, which allowed her heart to heal so she could recover.

By this time her blood pressure was dangerously low and other organs, especially her kidney and liver, started showing signs of failure.   Her failing heart would not have sustained her without life support.

The ECMO procedure involves channeling the patient’s blood into a roller pump that serves as the patient’s “heart” throughout treatment.   The ECMO machine is connected to a patient through plastic tubes (cannula) placed in large veins and arteries in the legs, neck or chest.   The pump sends blood through an oxygenator, which serves as an artificial lung, infusing the blood with oxygen and removing carbon dioxide and returning it to the patient.   During ECMO treatment, the patient’s heart continues to beat, but its work is made easier because the ECMO machine does much of the pumping.

Dr. Binoy Chattuparambil, Chief Cardiac Surgeon and Director of the ECMO program at Health City, explained the need for this procedure in Mrs. Kaur’s situation:  “We chose ECMO as it is less complicated and quick to institute.   With informed consent from her husband and family, ECMO was instituted through a vein in the groin.   She required very intense monitoring and treatment in the ICU for next few days, but the heart slowly and steadily showed signs of improvement and she was taken off ECMO.   An echocardiogram showed that the heart had recovered completely without any signs of damage. She went home with a strong and healthy heart and functional organs.”

During extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, the patient is the focus of a highly coordinated medical team and receives round-the-clock care while on the “heart lung machine”.    The length of time a patient remains on therapy depends on the diagnosis and the patient’s individual response.

An ECMO machine can help save a patient’s life, but it does not treat the patient’s disease or injury.   The machine simply provides support for a patient while the health care team works on treating the underlying disease or injury (such as an infection) or until organs for transplant become available.

Singh reported with great relief that his mother responded well to ECMO treatment.

“The treatment was successful. After 48 to 60 hours, she was out of danger … we were very thankful that she survived the treatment,” he said.

Dr. Chattuparambil noted that ECMO treatment is a team process and requires an experienced team of doctors and medical professionals.

“Health City Cayman Islands has a very strong, expert and experienced team of doctors, perfusion scientists and nurses who have managed many patients on ECMO and saved their lives.   The hospital has two ECMO machines, one of them is the most advanced design called CARDIOHELP which, being very small and compact, can be used to transport patients via road or by air,” he explained.

Dr. Binoy, as he is called, made note of the exceptional ECMO outcomes at Health City.

“During the last two and half years we have treated eight critically ill patients with ECMO, both children and adults.   With a survival rate of 90 per cent, our positive results are far better than the global average published by the ELSO (Extracorporeal Life Support Organization) registry, located in the United States,” he said.

Kaur’s family had words of thanks and praise for the entire Health City Team following her treatment.

Singh said: “We as a family want to thank Health City and all of the doctors here.   Along with the doctors, we want to thank the finance and admin team, as well as the hospitality staff.   They have been tremendous this last two weeks.   They have given us all the support we required. We have been away from our family back home, and they have come forward to be our family and treated us as a family member.   I have never seen such compassion and hospitality anywhere in the world as I have seen at Health City, so from the bottom of our hearts we wanted to thank Health City and all the staff for cooperating with us and giving us support at the time that we needed it.”

In addition to Dr. Binoy Chattuparambil, the ECMO team at Health City Cayman Islands includes cardiac surgeon Dr. Sumit Modi; Dr. Dhruva Krishnan and his team of anesthesiologists and intensivists; Perfusion scientists Lessley Christudos and Ravindra Deshpande; and Mevin Varghese and his team of Intensive Care Unit (ICU) nurses.

About Health City Cayman Islands

Health City Cayman Islands, the vision of renowned heart surgeon and humanitarian Dr. Devi Shetty, is supported by two major health-care organizations, Narayana Health and the U.S.-based Ascension, which is America’s largest faith-based and nonprofit health system, providing the highest quality care to all, with special attention to those who are poor and vulnerable.    Health City, only the second hospital in the Caribbean to receive the Joint Commission International’s “hospital accreditation”, provides compassionate, high-quality, affordable health-care services in a world-class, comfortable, patient-centered environment. Offering health care to local, regional and international patients, Health City Cayman Islands delivers excellence in adult and pediatric cardiology, cardiac surgery, cardiac electrophysiology, medical oncology, orthopedics, sports medicine, pediatric endocrinology, gastrointestinal and bariatric surgery, neurology, interventional neurology and neuro-diagnostics, neurosurgery, minimally invasive spine surgery, gynecology, urology, colorectal surgery, dental, sleep lab and pulmonology services.

For further information, visit www.healthcitycaymanislands.com.

Release: Health City Cayman Islands

 

 

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Caribbean News

STAKEHOLDER CONSULTATIONS EXPECTED TO ASSIST GOV’T PLANNING FOR CLIMATE CHANGE 

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KINGSTON, April 29 (JIS):

Minister without Portfolio in the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation, Senator the Hon. Matthew Samuda, says the outcome of discussions arising from the Jamaica National Stakeholder Consultation on Climate Services and the 1st National Climate Forum (NCF-1) will assist in guiding the Government’s planning for climate change.

This, he points out, is important for climate mitigation as well as building Jamaica’s resilience.

“We look forward to the discussions that will, no doubt, take place. We look forward to the basis of planning for the Government to streamline its investments to ensure you have the tools that you need to better advise us, that the WRA (Water Resources Authority) has the tools to digitise its monitoring network, and that all of the agencies that touch our planning mechanisms have the tools. But we need to know what we are facing, and we’re guided by your expertise,” Minister Samuda said.

He was addressing the opening ceremony for the Jamaica National Stakeholder Consultation on Climate Services and the 1st National Climate Forum (NCF-1) at the Courtyard by Marriott Hotel in New Kingston on Monday (April 29).

Senator Samuda said given the fact that the climate has changed and continues to do so, investments in and collaborations on building Jamaica’s predictive and scientific capacity must be prioritised.

“Ultimately, we need to be able to assess our current climatic realities if we are to better plan, if we’re to insist and ensure that our infrastructure meets the needs that we need it to. I’m very happy that this event is happening… because this is a critical issue.

“Jamaica, last year, faced its worst and most severe drought… and this year, we’re already seeing the impacts of not quite as severe a drought but, certainly, a drought with severe impacts, especially in the western part of the country,” he said.

Principal Director, Meteorological Service of Jamaica, Evan Thompson, explained that the forum aims to, among other things, establish a collaboration platform for climate services providers and users to understand risks and opportunities of past, present and future climate developments, as well as improve inter-agency coordination of policies, plans and programmes.

Among the other presenters were Ambassador, European Union to Jamaica, Her Excellency Marianne Van Steen; Chief Scientist/Climatologist, Caribbean Institute for Meteorology and Hydrology, Adrian Trotman; and Head, Regional Climate Prediction Services, World Meteorological Organization, Wilfran Moufouma-Okia.

The Meteorological Service of Jamaica hosted the Jamaica National Stakeholder Consultation on Climate Services and the 1st National Climate Forum (NCF-1) in partnership with the Caribbean Institute for Meteorology and Hydrology and the World Meteorological Organization.

The National Stakeholder Consultation is a governance mechanism that guides how different sectors or actors work together to create products that contribute to adaptation and resilience-building. It seeks to create a road map for the development and implementation of climate services to inform decision-making.

NCF-1 aims to bridge the gap between climate providers and users. It increases the use of science-based information in decision-making and operations with the aim of generating and delivering co-produced and co-designed products and services.

CONTACT: CHRIS PATTERSON

 

 

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Haiti- ECHO humanitarian efforts

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Rashaed Esson

Staff writer

#Haiti#Crisis#HumanitarianEfforts#ECHO, April 23rd, 2024 – Due to the worsening Humanitarian crisis in Haiti with an increase in death toll and injured people, The European Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations (ECHO), launched an emergency airlift of 5 flights carrying essentials which include up to 62 tons of medicine as well as emergency shelter equipment, and water and sanitation items. These were brought to Cap Haitien according to a report from the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), on April 19, as the international Airport in Port au prince remains closed following the gang attack last month.

 

 

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Dominica repeals laws criminalizing gay sex

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Rashaed Esson

Staff Writer

#Dominica#LGBTQIA, April 24, 2034- Dominica has decided to remove colonial era laws that criminalized gay sex, joining Trinidad and Tobago, Barbados, St. Kitts and Nevis and Antigua and Barbuda.

This comes almost five years after a man of the queer community, whose identity was withheld for his safety, spoke out against Dominica’s laws in 2019, saying they violated his  rights.

 

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