Today was all around a fabulous day. It was beautiful
outside, we were successful in our repairs and met with our friend, Andres, for
dinner. We started our day at Roosevelt, instead of heading straight to gastro
to continue our work on the endoscopes, we had a meeting with Dr. Mejia, the
director of Internal Medicine, and toured the women’s ward which was nicely
decorated with mother’s day banners. The nurses there brought us a broken ECG
and a broken SpO2 sensor.
We discovered that the ECG was missing a number of
important parts including a paper role, pin, and battery. We asked a nurse
whether she could locate a paper role and the pin, but apparently the pin has
been lost making the thermal printer of the ECG unusable. It was also
particularly interesting to see that the battery was simply missing from the
machine. A general consensus from the staff was that the battery had to have
been stolen and sold on the market. However, as this model of ECG is no longer
manufactured we are having a lot of trouble even locating a replacement
battery. Unfortunately the ECG battery was not an unique case, the SpO2 sensor
was also missing a battery. It had also clearly been opened up before and put
back together ad-hoc. It led us to many questions about how this equipment has
been treated and who has damaged it in the past. For now, there is
unfortunately nothing we can do except look to order more parts for these machines.
What we found where we expected to find the battery of the SpO2 sensor |
We then returned back to gastro, determined to make headway.
We are happy to report that by the end of the day we fully repaired two endoscopes!!!
It was incredibly rewarding to see just how grateful the nurses and doctors
were for our help and the machines are immediately being put to use for procedures tomorrow. Each endoscope we repaired saved the hospital
about $4,500, money they truly do not have to spend.
We fixed it! Don't worry, Mark was happier than he looks |
We left the hospital with more spirit than we’ve had the
entire trip. We were feeling useful, needed, appreciated and finally confident
in our abilities. We spent of the day completing research until we met up with
Jorge Andres Bonilla, a friend from last summer who took us all out to dinner
and drinks. It was great seeing Andres again and great to hear how successful
he’s been since he finished his residency at Roosevelt. After a great night of
catching up we’re all tired and ready for our last work day of the week.
Thanks for a great night, Andres! |
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