In
November of 2003 Dr. Kim Hai Bui instigated and coordinated a Medical
Congress in
Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC), Vietnam. It included participants from the
Sart Tilman University Hospital (CHU) of the University of Liège (ULg),
Belgium, and the Health Care Service of HCMC. This humanitarian project was also backed by the province of Liège, Belgium.
Twenty faculty members
from the University of Liège Medical School came to the Congress to
exchange their respective experiences and knowledge in various fields including: hospital management, cardiology, emergency medicine, orthopedics,
hematology, pulmonary medicine, medical imaging, endocrinology, ENT,
gynecology, family medicine, and organ
transplantation.
Following the Congress Professor Michel Meurisse M.D, Head of the
Abdominal Surgery and Transplant Department of the ULg, met with the
officials from the Health Care Service of HCMC to discuss the
feasibility
of a live donor renal transplantation program. After establishing the
necessary infrastructure, a transplant team from the CHU of the ULg
successfully performed four kidney transplants from live donors at
Hospital 115 in HCMC in February 2004. As expected, the news of the
kidney transplant operations made the front page of the Saigon Times
newspaper. Currently, more than 30 kidney transplants from live
donors have been performed.
Building on the success of the kidney transplant program, Dr. Kim
Hai Bui expanded the scope of the humanitarian project by
introducing a cardiac surgery program in Vietnam. After initial
feasibility studies, in May 2006, Professor Natzi Sakalihasan, M.D,
from the ULg, successfully performed cardiac operations
on ten patients. Subsequent missions have been carried out, and to date more than
30
cardiac operations have been performed.
Also, in November 2006, under the guidance of Professor Didier Giet,
M.D, also from the ULg, a Family Practice training
program was established at the University Training Center of HCMC. This
program helps provide effective first line medical care for
patients who often go directly to hospitals due
to the lack of general practitioners and family doctors.
In addition to these focused and direct programs, our group has also
been involved in the education and training of health care providers in
Vietnam.
Thus, there have been ongoing exchange programs for nursing,
physicians, students, and health care administrators between the ULg and
the
Health Care Service at HCMC.
Also under consideration is a project to build a high technology
Belgian-Vietnamese University hospital in Cu Chi (20 kms from HCMC),
which includes a technologically advanced hospital, a medical school,
and a pharmaceutical hub. This project was ranked among the top
priority investments by the Vietnamese government. Dr. Kim Hai Bui is
leading this project, with Dr. Toan Nguyen, Professor of Medicine at the
University of Washington in Seattle, Washington. Other Belgian physicians are serving as consultants for this project.
Wellness Global Foundation hopes to expand our mission to include creating wells to bring potable water to village schools, support handicap children, and creating scholarship programs for poor and gifted children who cannot afford education.
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