Contact Information: For more information, contact: Lauren Pearson C: (224) 374-8610 O: (847) 384-4031 Catherine Dolf C: (847) 894-9112 O: (847) 384-4034
Changing Lives... One Project at a Time
Orthopaedic Surgeon Receives Distinguished Humanitarian Award
| Quelle: AAOS
SAN FRANCISCO, CA--(Marketwire - March 5, 2008) - Touching patients, physicians and
underdeveloped communities in more than twenty countries around the globe,
pediatric orthopaedic surgeon, Kaye Wilkins, MD, has spent his entire
career teaching people to become more self-sufficient. Today at the 75th
Annual Meeting of the American Academy of
Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS), Dr. Wilkins was the recipient of the ninth
annual Humanitarian Award.
"This is a special honor given on behalf of my colleagues and I am very
humbled," said Kaye Wilkins, MD.
Early in his career, Dr. Wilkins realized there was a huge disparity in the
delivery of orthopaedic care between developed and underdeveloped nations.
When he settled in San Antonio, Texas, he wanted to do something about it.
His first humanitarian project was with Amigos de las Americas, where he
trained high school and college students to provide free vaccinations to
the underserved populations in Central and South America. Dr. Wilkins then
became part of the group, Partners of America, teaching area orthopaedic
surgeons in Peru how to manage pediatric orthopaedic conditions. He
established an exchange program whereby physicians from Texas and Peru
shared their talents and over the course of his career, has educated
countless numbers of foreign health professionals in new techniques and
concepts. These physicians have all gone on to educate their colleagues
about what they learned as a result of Dr. Wilkins and his teaching.
"He is an inspiration and outstanding role model for all who strive to
improve the quality of life for patients with orthopaedic problems," said
colleague and personal friend David A. Spiegel, MD.
"I could not have done this without the resources and help of those around
me," added Dr. Wilkins. "The Christus Santa Rosa Children's Hospital and
the staff there have enabled me to help others. I cannot thank them enough
for the opportunities they have given me. My family has also been more
than supportive of my work. My wife Sidney and our three sons have taken it
upon themselves to visit underprivileged countries to help and assist where
they can."
After receiving a monetary donation from a San Antonio philanthropist in
1997, Dr. Wilkins and the Director of Physical Therapy at Santa Rosa
Hospital, Jose Santos, developed "Projecto Muzquiz" at a Pediatric
Rehabilitation Centre in Muzquiz, Mexico, 200 miles south of San Antonio.
This is an ongoing effort that provides orthopaedic and rehabilitation
assistance free of charge to children from Mexico with special needs.
Hundreds of children have benefited from treatment since the program was
established.
Most recently, the ongoing war in Iraq has created a need for continuing
medical education in orthopaedics. The physicians in Iraq have had
difficulties maintaining their orthopaedic training programs and treating
patients. Using their own finances, he and another pediatric orthopaedic
surgeon Dr. James Roach, embarked on a project to bring continuing
education in pediatric orthopaedics to members of the Iraq Orthopaedic
Association at a hospital in Basra, Iraq. While there, they saw over a
hundred patients and taught orthopaedic procedures and treatments to the
residents and attending staff of the Basra General Hospital.
For the past 13 years, his major effort has been to bring continuing
education in pediatric orthopaedics to the Haitian orthopaedic community.
In this period of time, he has made over 25 trips to assist in the
development of various pediatric orthopaedic treatment centers. His most
recent accomplishment has been the establishment of the Haiti Clubfoot
Project with other members of the Pediatric
Orthopaedic Society of North America (POSNA). This program is training
non-physician technicians to perform the basic correction of clubfeet using
the Ponseti Technique.
In many areas of the world the local orthopaedic surgeons have difficulty
obtaining postgraduate education. Several countries have insufficient
financial resources for the local orthopaedic surgeons to travel to other
countries or bring speakers with expertise to their countries to further
their postgraduate education. Through the POSNA, Dr. Wilkins has organized
a Outreach Continuing Education Program in Pediatric Orthopaedics. The
POSNA faculty members volunteer to participate in the courses and pay their
own travel expenses to the host countries. Since its inception, this
program has conducted thirty post graduate outreach courses on pediatric
orthopaedics in twenty separate countries. This program has brought
continuing education to areas where it otherwise would not be available.
Dr. Wilkins, as the result of his desire to teach in countries with limited
resources, has traveled the world and touched the lives of patients,
surgeons, nurses and other health professionals in Mexico, India, Ecuador,
Paraguay, Vietnam, Poland, Iraq, Haiti, the Dominican Republic and
Slovakia, just to name a few.
Dr. Wilkins added, "Over the course of my career, I have learned that
helping people does not happen overnight. For you to truly have an effect
on people, it has to be done in the long term. You have to meet them, find
out their needs and figure out where the gap or gaps lie. The next part is
simple; teach them what you know."
Previous AAOS Humanitarian Award Winners
About
AAOS
To view this release online, go to:
http://www.pwrnewmedia.com/2008/aaos030508_humanitarian/index.html