Podcasts about pan african academy

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Best podcasts about pan african academy

Latest podcast episodes about pan african academy

Personal Development Trailblazers Podcast
Burned Out? Smart Career Moves Using Decision Science With Mark Shrime

Personal Development Trailblazers Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2025 16:24


Welcome to the Personal Development Trailblazers Podcast! In today's episode, we'll break down the science of decision-making to help you escape burnout and design a career you loveMark Shrime is an internationally renowned speaker, surgeon, author, coach, and cat dad. He serves as the Editor-in-Chief of BMJ Global Health and a Lecturer in Global Health and Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School.Previously, he was the International Chief Medical Officer at Mercy Ships, the founding O'Brien Chair of Global Surgery at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, and the Director of the Center for Global Surgery Evaluation at Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary. He also served as Research Director for the Program in Global Surgery and Social Change at Harvard. Trained in otolaryngology, head and neck surgery, and microvascular reconstructive surgery, he earned an MPH in global health (2011) and a PhD in Health Policy focused on decision-making (2015).Clinically, he specializes in large head and neck tumors with Mercy Ships, working closely with residents from the Pan-African Academy of Christian Surgeons. He has worked and taught in multiple countries, including Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Benin, and Madagascar. His research explores the global burden of surgical disease, financial barriers to care, and surgical access worldwide. As a co-author of the Lancet Commission on Global Surgery, he focuses on optimizing surgical policies to improve health outcomes while reducing financial hardship for patients.Beyond surgery, his coaching, writing, and speaking help people navigate major life decisions. He merges personal experience with decision science to guide others in building a life of purpose and fulfillment. His book, Solving for Why, has sold nearly 15,000 copies. Outside of his professional endeavors, he is a photographer, rock climber, and ninja warrior. He competed on Seasons 8, 9, and 11 of American Ninja Warrior.Connect with Mark Here: Instagram / Threads: @markshrimeLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/markshrime/Medium: @shrimePersonal website: markshrime.comWebsite: solvingforwhy.coGrab the freebie here: markshrime.com/anatomy-pdf===================================If you enjoyed this episode, remember to hit the like button and subscribe. Then share this episode with your friends.Thanks for watching the Personal Development Trailblazers Podcast. This podcast is part of the Digital Trailblazer family of podcasts. To learn more about Digital Trailblazer and what we do to help entrepreneurs, go to DigitalTrailblazer.com.Are you a coach, consultant, expert, or online course creator? Then we'd love to invite you to our FREE Facebook Group where you can learn the best strategies to land more high-ticket clients and customers. QUICK LINKS: APPLY TO BE FEATURED: https://app.digitaltrailblazer.com/podcast-guest-applicationDIGITAL TRAILBLAZER: https://digitaltrailblazer.com/

ICMDA Recordings
Webinar #31 Dr Keir Thelander - Training Christian Surgeons in Africa

ICMDA Recordings

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2024 53:45


Recorded on 5 November 2020 for ICMDA Webinars. Dr Peter Saunders chairs a webinar with Dr Keir Thelander Hear the inspiring story of PAACS - an organisation that trains and disciples African surgeons to glorify God and provide excellent care to those most in need. Keir Thelander attended Indiana University School of Medicine and completed his general surgery residency at Fairview Hospital in Cleveland, OH, in 2004. After working as a General Surgeon in Cleveland, Keir was led to train and disciple African doctors to become surgeons. Keir's young family of 4 moved to Bongolo Hospital in Gabon. For 8 years Keir served as the Program Director of the Pan-African Academy of Christian Surgeons (PAACS) surgical residency program as well as the medical director of this 150 bed facility. Recently Dr Thelander has been Team Leader for the over 20 ex-patriots living in Bongolo, while he also worked as the West/Central Africa Director for PAACS. Presently, Keir is the Executive Vice President of PAACS. In this role he oversees their 15 training programs across Africa. Keir's passions are helping doctors and all people to thrive no matter the circumstances as well as surgical education in cross-cultural contexts. ⁠⁠⁠⁠To listen live to future ICMDA webinars visit⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://icmda.net/resources/webinars/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Conversations from Here...
Episode 44: Dr. John L. Tarpley, MD

Conversations from Here...

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2023 59:29


In this episode of Conversations from Here I am honored and privileged to speak with John L. Tarpley, MD. He is Professor of Surgery, Emeritus at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and the former Program Director for General Surgery Residents there. He has also been the Associate Chief of General Surgery at the VA Hospital and is currently the Academic Dean of the Pan-African Academy of Christian Surgeons. He is a passionate advocate for patients and doctors alike. He has spent a huge portion of his professional life in Africa-- specifically Nigeria, Kenya, Rwanda and Botswana, training young surgeons and ministering to those most in need. "Tarp"-- as anyone in the hallowed halls of Vanderbilt will attest-- is a legendary character who is as humble as he is funny and as knowledgeable as he is wise. We talk about his life and work, discuss some of the challenges with getting medical care in places far from urban centers, his personal love story and an early obsession with college sports. It's a fascinating talk, indeed. Enjoy!   More on Dr. Tarpley: https://www.vumc.org/surgical-sciences/person/john-l-tarpley-md https://news.vumc.org/2016/07/26/tarpley-may-be-retiring-but-he-isnt-slowing-down/ https://paacs.net/   Books Mentioned: The Book of Joy: Lasting Happiness in a Changing World-- by the His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Archbishop Desmond Tutu & Douglas Abrams https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/533718/the-book-of-joy-by-his-holiness-the-dalai-lama-and-archbishop-desmond-tutu-with-douglas-abrams/   Long Walk to Freedom-- by Nelson Mandela https://www.littlebrown.com/titles/nelson-mandela/long-walk-to-freedom/9780759521049/  

Pressing On Podcast
Cross-Cultural Leadership

Pressing On Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022 41:33


Scott and Jordy are joined by Keir and Joanna Thelander to discuss Cross-Cultural Leadership. Keir and Joanna spent a decade in the jungle of Gabon, Africa as Keir served as a surgeon. Keir now serves as the Executive Vice President of the Pan-African Academy of Christian Surgeons, and Joanna as the Volunteer Coordinator at Grace Church.

Off The Table: A Global Surgery Podcast
3: PAACS – COSECSA Partnership and Working in Sub-Saharan Africa

Off The Table: A Global Surgery Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2021 29:04


This week we are ecstatic to be joined by the renowned Dr. Dieudonne Lemfuka, a general surgeon from the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Dr. Lemfuka is passionately involved in surgery, surgical education, global surgery advocacy, and Christian SIM missionary work. Dieudonne received his medical training from the Pan-African Academy of Christian Surgeons (PAACS) out of the Bongolo Hospital program in Gabon. He is a certified Fellow by the College of Surgeons of the East, Central, and Southern Africa (COSECSA). He currently works and resides in Monrovia, Liberia, as a General Surgeon and Surgical Education Coordinator at ELWA Hospital. Tune in to immerse oneself in Dieudonne's captivating memoir. Together we delve into his humble beginnings and navigate through the series of obstacles he's conquered throughout his journey. After touching on some of his inspirations for pursuing surgical care, Dieudonne expresses his admiration for the organizations COSECSA and PAACS. He highlights the shared visions between the two, as well as the equitable opportunity for salvation that they provide financially-limited physicians with. Dieudonne articulates his concerns with doctor shortages in Liberia which lead to physician burnout. Fervidly speaking on the critical challenges that surgeons face when working in demanding environments in underdeveloped regions. Nonetheless, he remains optimistic regarding the future of these challenges and is committed to providing and teaching widespread, affordable, and high-quality surgical care. We then shift gears and discuss some of his thought-provoking contributions to academia, as well as his advocacy for equality of surgical care throughout Africa. He touches on his work as a Christian missionary, before providing us with one of the most compelling definitions of global surgery that we've received from a guest to date.  To hear more from Dr. Dieudonne Lemfuka, watch him present his webinar “Training Christian Surgeons: An Answer to the Surgical Need in Africa” at the Samaritan's Purse International Health Forum. Contact: instagram: ott_globalsurgery twitter: OFFTHETABLE_POD email: offthetablepod21@gmail.com patreon: https://www.patreon.com/offthetablepodcast

Friends of Kijabe
Greg Sund

Friends of Kijabe

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2020 25:08


Greg Sund David: [00:00:00] Good afternoon and good evening. We have no idea what time zone you guys will be in when you're watching this, but I am David Shirk. I'm director of Friends of Kijabe, and I'm sitting here with Greg Sund, our newest addition to the Kijabe team. Greg: [00:00:17] We moved here from a small village, rural hospital in Burundi, where we have been for about five years. David: [00:00:26] What was your training and background and specialty in the States before you started doing this Africa stuff? Greg: [00:00:34] So I'm a board-certified anesthesiologist. I did a fellowship in cardiothoracic anesthesia and I was in private practice for several years before we moved to Burundi about five years ago. And during my time in private practice, I was doing annual trips to various places in Africa and kind of prayerfully trying to discern with my wife where God might be calling us to. And we ended up at this hospital in Burundi, which was a teaching hospital, and it was a place where I could not just do anesthesia, but also teach anaesthesia to medical students and nonphysicians.  David: [00:01:22] What was the terminology for them?  Here we call them KRNA, Kenya Registered Nurse Anesthetist. Did you guys have a designation? Greg: [00:01:29] So that's one of the problems, is that the training for nonphysician anaesthetists is variable from country to country. In Africa, there's no continent wide standard. And so in Burundi, they were anesthesia technicians and so they had a bit less training than the Kenyan nurse anesthetists have here. And unfortunately, it's different in every country. And unfortunately, there's still a lot of hospitals in sub-Saharan Africa where the anesthesia is being provided by underqualified and sometimes not even trained providers who are just there to fill in the gaps. David: [00:02:13] And this was the case in Kijabe for a very long time. I want to get into Burundi, I want to hear more about that, because I actually don't know - I know you, and I know some of your colleagues, but I don't know much about the hospital and particularly the medical kind of situation that you guys were facing there before that. Why does somebody who's a private practice anesthesiologist in America walk away from that and move to Africa? Greg: [00:02:42] Yeah, well, ultimately, it was definitely a calling from the Lord that he laid on our hearts after doing frequent trips to Africa. I saw just the massive discrepancy in anesthesia care between what's going on in most of sub-Saharan Africa and what's going on and in the United States. And I was just really convicted that here I have the ability and the capacity to go to a place like Burundi or Kenya and teach anesthesia. And it was something that the Lord laid on my heart and thankfully on my wife's heart as well. David: [00:03:23] That's awesome.  And you guys came out...so you've been doing short travel trips and then you moved for a year in 2013? Greg: [00:03:31] Yeah, it was twenty fourteen. We moved to Burundi for a year and we joined a multi-specialist team that had just settled there a few months earlier that I had met on one of these short-term trips to Tenwek hospital in Kenya in 2010. We heard they were moving there [Burundi]. They had three surgical specialists and the anesthesia care at the time was provided by one non-physician anesthetist with coverage by some, actually, non-trained, providers. Their community health worker, who normally gives vaccines, was taught how to give Ketamine to get people through surgeries and caesarean sections on at nights and on the weekends. They asked me if we would come out for initially for a year to help work with this one non-physician anaesthetist to try to help increase her capacity for what she could do, and during our year there, we realized that there's actually, an anesthetist training program that sends students to this [Kibuye] hospital.  They're actually medical students who had a required anesthesia in critical care rotation and there was no anesthesiologist to teach them. And so we felt like this is where we were called to be for longer than just one year. So we went back to the States to support raise for a year, and then to France for a year for language training, because it's a Francophone country, and then in twenty-seventeen we moved there and we've been there up until just a few months ago. David: [00:05:12] We've had this KRNA program in Kijabe for about a decade [2007]. Officially. I think before that, unofficially. What what is the difference between anesthesiology training for a physician level anesthesiologist versus for nurse-level in Africa? Greg: [00:05:34] In general, nonphysician anaesthetists are there to put the patients to sleep, to monitor them during surgery, to wake them up. Physician anesthesiologists are there to be consultants for more complicated cases, when complications arise at any time during the perioperative period. They are also, typically in Africa, the ones that will be a lot more involved in intensive care medicine, in post-operative pain management, and also in leading and teaching medical students, anaesthetists, students and other other health care specialists that that need some training in anesthesia, critical care and or resuscitation. David: [00:06:31] What's what did ICU care look like in Burundi versus what it looks like somewhere like Kenya?  I know Kenya, we're behind America, but you still walk in to [Kijabe] ICU and we've got real ventilators and usually good oxygen supply, right? Greg: [00:06:49] Yeah, I think in the entire country of Burundi, there are about 12 ICU ventilators, unfortunately, none of them are at the hospital that I worked at. Those are all at the main university teaching hospital in the capital city. And when we arrived, there was no Intensive Care Unit. During my time there, we made a small step forward by designating four surgical beds that we were where we were able to do a little bit more intensive monitoring, nursing surveillance. But it was still a far cry from what you have at Kijabe, and what we're used to in the U.S. David: [00:07:35] What would what you want to see if you were to think five, 10, 15, 20 years out? What would you like to see happen in our region, in East Africa?  You could speak to Burundi or you can...I don't know how familiar you are with other countries?  So answer however you want. Greg: [00:07:57] I would say anesthesia care and critical care in general are very variable right now. And there are a lot of places where anesthesia is simply not safe. Mortality under surgery in sub-Saharan Africa, in general, is twice what it is in the US. And so there needs to be a great deal more invested in training nonphysician anaesthetists, which ultimately needs to be done by physician anesthetists. And that's kind of leading into why we decided to move to Kenya. David: [00:08:34] Awesome. David: [00:08:35] Mark Newton does some sessions here just on training. Training trainers, essentially. That's the that's the vision, right? Greg: [00:08:43] If you're teaching people who are qualified to teach others, that's the Biblical model from the 2 Timothy Chapter 2 - "teach others who will be able to teach others who will be able to teach others." Greg: [00:08:57] And so that's a big part of why we moved here. We saw that what we were doing, training nonphysician anesthesia providers in Burundi and medical students was good work and it was important, but it wasn't sustainable in the long term. And so in Burundi, for example, there are only seven physician anesthesiologists..  [00:09:20] I was the only one working outside the capital city. And so that leaves the vast majority of hospitals without any anesthesia consultants, without somebody who can manage critically-ill patients in an intensive care setting. And so ultimately, during our time in Burundi, I came to realize that Burundi was not alone. There are a lot of other East-African countries where this is the case. [00:09:47] If you look at the numbers, there is a recommendation by the World Federation of Anesthesiologists to have a minimum five physician anesthesiologists per one-hundred-thousand population. David: [00:10:06] How many people are in Burundi? Greg: [00:10:08] So the number in Burundi came out to. . .it was about zero point zero one eight [0.018/100,000], I believe.  It's better in Kenya [1.7/100,000], but it's still far from five per one-hundred-thousand. And so I came to realize over our time in Burundi that sub-Saharan Africa, while it does need more nonphysician anaesthetists, in order to to form and train more nonphysician anesthetists, we have to, at the same time, train physician anesthesiologists. David: [00:10:41] So what has the groundwork looked like for building up to this training program starting? Greg: [00:10:47] There started to be some discussions going on between a small group of us who are anaesthesiologists, who are missionaries in Africa in twenty-seventeen. Three years ago, and most of us had been exposed to or involved in helping to do some anesthesia training with surgeons under the PAACS, which is the Pan African Academy of Christian Surgeons. And so we already had some relational foundation with PAACS programs and the leadership of PAACS. We started talking together as a group about the need to start creating Anesthesiology Physician Anesthetist training program.  It seemed to us logical to try to partner with PAACS. And so, last year at the PAACS board meeting in Chicago, a group of us went and presented the idea of starting an initial, anesthesiology residency program under the umbrella of PAACS to their board. It was received favorably and they agreed to allow us to start this initial program in January twenty-twenty-one here in Kijabe. David: [00:12:06] Awesome. David: [00:12:07] And what has to what has to fall in place for things to kick off in January? I assume there's a few things. Greg: [00:12:16] Thankfully we have now three board certified physician anesthesiologists that will be serving here myself, Dr. Roger Barnette and Dr. Mark Newton. Both of them have been here already previously for several years. So that's the first piece. And we can check that one off. The second piece is we do need funding to support this program. To train each resident costs about twenty-five-thousand dollars a year per resident. Greg: [00:12:53] Our plan is to start with two residents and build up from there. And so we are currently in the support raising phase of this. David: [00:13:03] How long is the program? Is it three years? Greg: [00:13:05] Yes. So, all of our, anesthesiology residents will have done one a one year internship that might be done in Kijabe. It might be done elsewhere. But once they're once they've completed that, it will be three years of anesthesia and critical care training also. David: [00:13:26] That means total sort of three years. So seventy-five-thousand dollars per resident to get through the entire program. Greg: [00:13:36] The other thing you know, once that piece falls into place, the next thing we need to do is recruit our first two residents. The announcement that we would be starting this program was just sent out three weeks ago. Within a week we had over one hundred inquiries and within a week later, we had over 30 applications already submitted. We're currently, the the anesthesiology council under PAACS, is currently in the process of going through those applications,to find who will be our first two residents. David: [00:14:15] It's exciting. Yeah, it is really, really cool. It's been a dream long, long coming. David: [00:14:22] And then the other side of this, I assume that these guys will do have a bond service bond similar to how the surgeons do so, where the surgeons, if they come under PAACS, they're obligated to work the same number of years at a Christian Mission Hospital. Is that the same? Greg: [00:14:41] So that's our plan. And that's the model. Greg: [00:14:45] A big reason for that is because typically it is the rural areas that are that are underserved, both in terms of surgeons and anesthesiologists. And so, we're really looking to to recruit and train people who are going to go to those hard places and live in those rural areas where, you know, unfortunately, their salaries might not be as high as they would be in the city. And, their lifestyle is going to be very different. So, it's definitely a calling from the Lord, because they're going to have to give up a lot of the lifestyle that they might have in the bigger cities. Greg: [00:15:23] So that is our plan, to recruit residents who are who want to do that,  are willing to serve in rural mission hospitals after their training is done. David: [00:15:37] It might be worth explaining, because I'm sure some people will not be familiar with terms like missionary.  If somebody is not familiar with how the structure works, missionary might sound like an odd or archaic word. But but it's important to set up like what the need is because it gives a framework for what somebody like you or Roger Barnette or Mark Newton, how your life looks logistically, and why we need people to help with this training program. So what does it mean to be a missionary and how does that process work for you being here? Greg: [00:16:24] Wow, that's a that's a big question. David: [00:16:27] I mean, more practically than theologically, it's somebody who is sent by God. I felt a you talked a little about that in the beginning, as a spiritual call from God. This is your purpose. This is what you feel like you're being led toward in your life. But then what does that what does it look like practically after that? Greg: [00:16:49] I think those of us who are doing this feel called to to go to places where we can minister to the needs of people, both physically and spiritually. And so, you know, we're not just here to teach anesthesia. I'm not just here to teach anaesthesia, but also to to to disciple and to try and deepen my students, my residents, and hopefully my patients, to the understanding of who Jesus is, what he's done for me and and and the world, and point them to the hope that we have in him. Greg: [00:17:28] Logistically speaking, those of us who are missionaries working in medicine outside of the U.S., typically that means that we give up our salaries and we have to live off the support of others. So for all of us, we have a team of supporters in the U.S. Who give some give once a year, some give monthly, to meet all of our the expenses that that we have our living expenses and that allow us to be here and do this work. So for a lot of us that's going to be churches in the US or individual families. But that's really the only way that we can be here and continue to do this work. Greg: [00:18:17] Then that financial support goes through our mission agency. We are here under mission agencies who also care for us, who keep an eye on us, who help us logistically with all the particularities that come with living in rural Africa, which we can't be here doing what we're doing without them either. David: [00:18:42] I think this is helpful for people to understand the framework and complexity because we've talked about several organizations, and I don't want anybody's heads to get muddled over by this. But it's just important to know that it takes multiple organizations to make these things happen. So, they have their different roles. Your mission agency is Serge. But we've got PAACS, who's the overseeing body for the for these [training] programs. And we've got COSECSA, the College of Surgeons of East, Central, and Southern Africa, who's the accrediting body for the thing. And then we've got the little organization out of all of them, Friends of Kijabe, which is our nonprofit just dedicated to Kijabe Hospital.  David: [00:19:31] You have a great question of "Why, David, why are you doing this? What's your role in this process?  Why would funds come to Friends of Kijabe instead of PAACS?" David: [00:19:42] The short answer is ultimately funds are going to both. But Friends of Kijabe, we have connections with people who pass through here over time. And Kijabe Hospital has been around for 100 years. I think we're...2020...we just turned one-hundred and five [105] in May. So there's just a deep, deep network of people who care. And ultimately, this is why I think Kijabe is a cool place, is because we get to be part of these training programs that affect not just this one place, but affect the entire region. So for me personally, my role is just to help you guys amplify your message with the people we already have connected. And so that's our hope with Friends of Kijabe - essentially as money comes into Friends of Kijabe, a portion goes to PAACS for the education resources and a portion ends up at Kijabe Hospital. And we will just, really, follow the Anesthesia Council's instructions on where to write the check.  The biggest involvement of Friends of Kijabe, though, is the storytelling and connecting donors and just helping, hopefully, in that process. Greg: [00:21:03] Yeah, we're really grateful for friends of Kijabe. As I mentioned, the need to raise twenty-five thousand dollars a year per resident to us is a big part of this. And we are, as an Anesthesia Council, not really equipped to to do that. And so we were really grateful David and Friends of Kijabe agreed to help us with that with that arm of this program, as these guys are amazing. David: [00:21:34] You know, I spent a lot of time with Roger Barnette over the years, a lot of time with Mark Newton, and what they do for our countries, Kenya and Burundi, and for these parts of the region, and for our world, these guys are amazing.  For you [listening] as potential volunteers, once the world returns to normal, you will be really, really valuable. I know there's some people probably watching this. Joleen has been here. Usually, every summer she will come over for a month. I believe Liz Drum has been here before. Matt Kynes, we're hoping to get him here for a longer term basis, but he's been here, pretty regularly, teaching. And I know Roger Barnette has had some folks over from Temple and Mark Newton has brought folks from Vanderbilt.  Those connections are also really, really, really important.So if you're watching [or listening to] this, I know for some of you it may be possible on a regular schedule, and for some of you and may be less frequent, but it is a huge, huge, huge help for the people doing this [anesthesiology] on a daily basis, to either give them an extra hand, or give them a week or two off, where they can recover and get back into the fray. So definitely, as if you're watching this, keep that [a volunteer visit] in the back of your mind. David: [00:22:54] Also, how you can participate?  There's really three ways of really participating. You know, there's the financial component, there's the volunteer component, and then there's making connections with with colleagues that you may have around the States or around the world.Anything you would add to that? Greg: [00:23:19] No, I would second everything you just said. And yeah, I would encourage any anesthesiologist out there who's watching this, to come see for yourself. Kijabe is a really special place. A big part of the reason why we're able to start this program is because Kijabe is a place where we do get short-term volunteers who come and help and teach and give the long term folks a break. And it also is great because it gives the students a different perspective, because everybody who comes has something different to teach different areas of expertise, different experiences to share. And and all that, I think, is what's going to make this program so rich. David: [00:24:04] For me, this is really exciting because I've come in with my wife, Arianna, a pediatric emergency medicine doctor. We've been in Kijabe almost seven years now. When we came, we would hear legends, honestly, about these people who started these programs and how they came to be. So for me, just looking at this, this is just amazing. This is something that one hundred years from now, people are going to look back on and think, "Wow, this started there in this specific place with these people." Greg: [00:24:41] Thank you, David. Appreciate all that time and all your help. So it's exciting. David: [00:24:46] And so for all you guys out there who might be watching [or listening to] this, thank you in advance for however you are able to join us in making this making this dream of better quality, more accessible, more affordable health care a reality for people everywhere in the world. So thank you. Thank you.

Christian Doctor's Digest
Thomas Robey, MD: PAACS Update

Christian Doctor's Digest

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2020


Don't miss a single podcast of CMDA Matters. You can subscribe through iTunes or GooglePlay, download our free CMDA app and or listen on our website at www.cmda.org/cmdamatters. This weekly podcast hosted by Dr. Mike Chupp features one interview with brief news and announcements that matter to you. Today's interview is with Dr. Thomas Robey, the chair of the Pan-African Academy of Christian Surgeons. We hope you will find this interview inspiring as he discusses with Dr. Mike Chupp the history of PAACS, including the critical role CMDA played in its mission and growth to train and disciple African surgeons.

The Monday Christian Podcast
TMCP 26: The Cause and Cure of Spiritual Homesickness [Stan Key]

The Monday Christian Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2020 67:10


Stan Key is the President of the Francis Asbury Society. Stan's education includes an M.Div. degree from Asbury Theological Seminary and a Th.M. degree in Missions from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. He has completed additional graduate work at the Faculté Libre de Théologie Evangélique in Vaux-sur-Seine, France. After serving churches in Virginia, Kentucky, and Illinois, Stan and his family served for ten years as church-planting missionaries in the suburbs of Paris, France with One Mission Society. From 1994–2012, Stan was the senior pastor of Loudonville Community Church in Albany, NY. Stan joined the staff of the Francis Asbury Society in 2013 and was named president a year later. He serves as editor of The High Calling newsletter and authored The Last Word (Warner Press, 2015), a study on the book of Revelation, Marriage Matters (Francis Asbury Press, 2017), Jeremiah: Fire in His Bones (Warner Press, 2017), and Journey to Spiritual Wholeness (Francis Asbury Press, 2019). Stan is a member of the boards of One Mission Society and Sammy Tippit Ministries and has also served as the spiritual dean for the Pan-African Academy of Christian Surgeons (PAACS). Raised in Georgia, the son of a Methodist preacher, Stan came into a personal relationship with Jesus Christ while he was a student at Asbury College. It was there he met Katy, to whom he has been married since 1977. They have three children and seven grandchildren. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-monday-christian/support

Friends of Kijabe
PAACS Part 1

Friends of Kijabe

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2019 26:59


PAACS Part 1 Good morning and welcome to the first PAACS episode. PAACS stands for the Pan-African Academy of Christian Surgeons and on the next two episodes I’ll be sharing conversations with graduates and faculty in the PAACS training programs at mission hospitals in Kijabe and around Africa. Nothing done at Kijabe Hospital is in isolation. Surgeons have been training under the PAACS program at Kijabe for more than a decade, and I think the PAACS program develops some of the best Christian leaders on the planet – not just surgeons, but Christian leaders. Friends of Kijabe is a support organization – we support the work of Kijabe Hospital in general and we support the work of PAACS at Kijabe through infrastructure projects like the Operating Theatre Expansion or through needy patient funding. I’m excited to share these conversations because they paint a vision of what is possible. Dr. Jacques in Malawi describes the blessing PAACS is in African Healthcare The second interviewee is anonymous because of a sensitive location, but he articulates the intersection of mission, medicine and the gospel perhaps better than anyone I’ve ever interviewed. Dr. Beryl Akinyi, associate director of PAACS at Kijabe, talks about paying it forward – giving young surgeons the time and effort that was given her, to help them succeed. Please enjoy! David – You’ve been these multiple different places, you’ve seen PAACS working all over the continent, what is your impression on the work? Jacques – The work of PAACS? This is incredible, incredible work. As an African I can say clearly, without doubt, PAACS has been, and it is, and it will be a blessing for Africa. A real blessing for Africa. My real joy is, I come from nowhere, God allowed me to be a general surgeon, then on top of that, God allowed to become an educator with PAACS. I’m so happy to train others, just as Paul trained Timothy. This is my real joy, to train others. PAACS is a real blessing for us. David – Where is nowhere? Jacques – DRC is a huge country, blessed by several resources. But when you go to DRC, you will say what I am saying. People live in poverty, people die of simple health issues, people are not really educated. With all the conflicts that are happening in DRC, I really pray for my country. David – Where do you see yourself 5 or 10 years from now? The ways of God are sometimes difficult to understand. I don’t know why God didn’t allow me to find a suitable hospital in DRC to work and serve my people. He sent me instead to Cameroon to Mbingo hospital. I don’t know know why God has allowed the instability in Cameroon and sent me way down to Malawi. I don’t really understand, but I know as long as I’m on the path of our Lord Jesus Christ, I’m content with His plan for my life. But one day, if He allowed me to return to DRC, I would only say, “Thank You!” Y Interview David: One of the unique benefits of PAACS, you’re training not only surgeons, you are training Christian leaders. When you look at these wide-ranging systemic problems, that’s what you are teaching them to address. What does that look like in how you work with your students and how you are teaching them? Y: It’s really interesting to see how our residents are growing academically, but also spiritually. We recruit residents that are believers, they love the Lord, they want to share what the Lord has given to them. Some of them, they want to be missionaries, to go to remote places to help the needy people. But when they come to the training environment, they get more. We are trying to fit into the curriculum Bible studies, discussions that are related to what they are doing. How can you show the love of Christ to a sick patient? You might heal somebody with medication, but the way you touch the patient, the way you speak to the patient, the way you care for his well-being and the well-being of his family. This in our context, is very important. These are some of the things we try to emphasize, not just to look at the patient as a sick person, but as a person who has spiritual needs. Those spiritual needs need to come up so you will have the opportunity to talk to them. There are various ways we help our residents by demonstrating. As a teacher, I do all I can to help my resident understand why I am so compassionate to my patients. Why should I come and greet my patient? Why should I come and sit at his side and talk to him in a gentle way? Most of our patients are Muslims. It’s so amazing that when you offer prayers to them, they will always say “Yes, pray for me, pray for me so that I will get well.” And if we pray, we pray in the name of Jesus. We will tell them we are praying in the name of Jesus. And if they are healed, Jesus healed, not us. So, we integrate that into the system. We also help our residents to be residents that are telling the truth. That sheds light not only on the patients but on other workers. Did this thing happen? Did you do this test? No teacher, I did not. It helps to know we are not there only for the surgery, for the pathology, but we are saying to our resident, “Be honest in your deeds.” “Did you examine this patient?” No teacher, I did not. When we grow and understand honesty is part of the thing that reflects Christ’s life, it changes things. David: What’s interesting about that, is it shows the trust they have in you as a teacher. Y: One of the things I see in residents or workers, if they see the teacher saying, “I’m sorry, I think I should have done this thing differently.” That changes a lot in the life of the resident, the nurses, the team. For the teacher to say, “I think I made the wrong choice here. It was my fault.” It makes a lot of difference. This type of training I like so much because it carries me, because of who I am, and I should show respect and be honest to myself. If I am wrong, and I know that I am wrong, and I refuse to confess that, my resident will not do that. We know as a teacher, we do things, not intentionally, but if we make mistakes we must come back and confess them. And if we do that, the resident will train in the perspective that, if you are wrong, you have to say that you are wrong. It doesn’t have to be a hidden thing. It is a be a normal thing to say that you are wrong. “I’m sorry for doing that. I will not do this next time.” David: That’s so profound. Sometimes the hardest things to do are the ones that even a little child should know. This is an issue for every medical provider everywhere in the world. Am I willing to own the truth and speak the truth? Y: Really, we have a lot of opportunities. (Our country) is 99% Muslim. Most people who come to our hospital come for their health problems and this gives us opportunities to share Christ with them. It’s sometimes very easy to engage into a discussion with somebody. A few weeks ago, we got a gunshot injury. Somebody went to another country, bought a car, thieves pursued him to his house, and in his sleep, they shot him. The bullet went through the left side of his abdomen toward the right side. It passed in between two vertebrae, did not go into the spinal cord, just passing near. We took him into surgery, repaired about 4 bowel perforations, his ureter was cut, some of the vertebral vessels were so destroyed. But his function was not affected. Looking at the x-ray, “Is he really moving his legs, this man?” Looking at the entry, he narrowly escaped being paralyzed for his life, but it didn’t happen. That really gave us the opportunity to open the discussion, how God was merciful on him. We took the x-ray, showed him what could have happened to him. We opened that discussion, shared the love of Christ with. We are engaging in communication to lead him to Christ. So, trauma, getting into training, if I didn’t know how to repair these things, I wouldn’t have the opportunity to do that, to share Christ with someone. We see such scenarios in our hospitals most of the time. I’m really happy with the vision that PAACS has. We are going to change the way we do medical mission, because the Lord is in the process of changing the way we do medical mission. Why am I saying this? I used to be the only doctor in my hospital. When I came back I spent about 9 months being the only surgeon. I would be on call almost every night. That was the situation of each mission hospital about 20 years ago. Missionaries would come from overseas, they would go to the place where the need is overwhelming, and they would be the only doctor or surgeon in that place until they burned out. Do they have time with the patients, to share? If you look at the workload, you say “No, they probably do not have.” I’m proud to say, today we have 8 residents and we are planning to go up to 10. So, we will train and we will send. We are multiplying ourselves, instead of the past idea of just doing it. And we are multiplying with the local people, who understand the language, the politics, the places they need to go to. Medical mission is changing, it’s spreading, and I think now we are getting it right. Jesus started with 12 disciples, he concentrated on those 12, and taught them, and after that, they went all over. That’s how Christianity came to us, Christianity came to Africa. If they did not teach and also send, it would never happen. I think that PAACS is taking that hope. We are teaching, we are training, we are making disciples, and we are sending them to go spread the word. That is the positive thing to me in this situation. David – What motivates you as a surgeon, what gets you out of bed at three in the morning? Beryl – I’d say in Kenya there is a big surgical need, the fact that I can meet that and later they come back and they’re smiling, that motivates me. The other thing that gets me out of bed, is I’m heavily involved in training of residents. When I see someone comes in so green, and they graduate as a surgeon, to me that’s a very big motivation - we’ve added someone to the workforce, meeting the need within the country and Africa in general. How do you think about, and how do you talk about the surgical need in Kenya? Is there an easy way to describe it? Beryl – That’s one burden of having poor patients coming in late. The other problem comes in terms of workforce, when people are not properly trained to offer the service that is needed. Those who are trained or skilled, especially in subspecialties are very, very few. That means we have increased waiting time for anyone to get their treatment, and that just makes the burden heavier and heavier. That’s what I’d say currently. David – You were talking about how there is very limited sub-specialization, but a lot of you as general surgeons choose an area of expertise a little bit, even if it’s not on a diploma. What is that for you, what do you love doing? Beryl – Two things, I like doing breast surgery and surgical education. Breast surgery is a little bit individualized, direct to one patient. Surgical education, you are multiplying yourself, I’m not just one person doing this, I’m teaching many people at different levels. David – I have watched you in theatre, and you are a very good surgical teacher. You are very patient, very gentle, you are willing to take longer on a procedure so the person you are working with can learn to do it right. How, practically, do you think about surgical education? What are the things you do on a daily basis in your teaching role? Beryl – Currently, because Kijabe is a training site, we have general surgery, orthopaedic surgery, and pediatric surgery fellowship. I am the assistant program director for the general surgery program, but I coordinate the learning for all basic sciences for all these specialties. That has made me read more, but has also made me focus more on the bigger picture, what’s the need for all these individual students? I’m trying to organize, so that in the five-year-time that all these trainees are here, they get what they need to get to make them a better surgeon. As an individual, I’ve had people who invested time in me, so I could be a better surgeon. That drives me, because if they didn’t invest this time and energy in me, I don’t think I’d be what I am today. So, as an individual, I try to use those good qualities, to make me a better teacher for my residents. David – How does faith play into what you do with your teaching and even with patients? Beryl – God has called us to be good stewards with whatever talent he has given us. To me, being a surgeon is what God has given me, and that is what drives me. God has called me to be a good steward with this talent or this gift. Each time I go to the hospital to work, to teach, I do it for God, not necessarily for the patient or for somebody else to see me. If I do it for my own glory, or for the patients or everyone else to see me, at some point in time I will be tired if I don’t get any good feedback. Knowing I’m doing this for God, drives me to be better and better each day, because that’s what He requires of me. I’d say I’m very grateful to Kijabe and over all to the PAACS program for offering an opportunity for me to learn as a surgeon, to do what I love most, and for all the people who invested their time and energy to help me grow. I’m grateful to Kijabe as a hospital and to PAACS as an organization.

MedicalMissions.com Podcast
How to Waste Your Life

MedicalMissions.com Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2017


Stan Key was appointed President of The Francis Asbury Society on March 1, 2014. Stan and Katy Key come to FAS after 10 years of missionary service in Paris, France, and 18 years of pastoral leadership at Loudonville Community Church in Albany, New York. Joining the FAS team in January of 2013, Stan has contributed to the ministry of the Society through preaching, teaching, writing, and more recently, serving as Director of Operations. He also serves as Spiritual Dean with the Pan African Academy of Christian Surgeons (PAACS) and serves on the board of One Mission Society. He travels and speaks in churches, retreats, conferences, and camps both here and abroad. Katy also serves in many capacities at his side, and they serve at FAS as a team. Stan is the author of The Last Word (Warner Press, 2015), a study on the book of Revelation. Katy is the daughter of the founder of FAS, Dennis Kinlaw. Stan and Katy have three grown daughters and four grandchildren.

MedicalMissions.com Podcast
PAACS Ministry and Opportunities

MedicalMissions.com Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2016 61:51


The Pan-African Academy of Christian Surgeons is a five-year surgical residency program to train 100 Christian African doctors in mission hospitals by 2020. At the present, there are sixty-four residents being trained in nine countries. A great need exists for long and short term general surgeons and sub-specialists to participate. In addition, there is a spiritual curriculum to prepare each resident for spiritual growth and hospital leadership.

opportunities ministry surgical general surgery pan african academy christian surgeons
First Person with Wayne Shepherd
First Person: Bruce Steffes

First Person with Wayne Shepherd

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2015 24:00


Medical doctor Bruce Steffes tells of his calling to help train doctors in Africa through the Pan African Academy of Christian Surgeons, a ministry which has been impacted by the Ebola epidemic.

interview africa christianity medical ebola first person pan african academy christian surgeons bruce steffes
First Person with Wayne Shepherd
First Person: Bruce Steffes

First Person with Wayne Shepherd

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2015 23:59


Medical doctor Bruce Steffes tells of his calling to help train doctors in Africa through the Pan African Academy of Christian Surgeons, a ministry which has been impacted by the Ebola epidemic.

interview africa christianity medical ebola first person pan african academy christian surgeons bruce steffes
MedicalMissions.com Podcast
Head and Neck Tumors in Africa

MedicalMissions.com Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2013 50:07


As a head and neck cancer surgeon, I have served as a volunteer short-term faculty member for the Pan African Academy of Christian Surgeons (PAACS) in Cameroon, Ethiopia, and Kenya for the past 6 years. In that setting, I have cared for a small cross-section of congenital and neoplastic head and neck tumors. These challenging cases require a high level of technical expertise and equipment as well as good team work for management and rehabilitation. In addition, teaching general surgery residents to manage these cases involves introduction to unfamiliar anatomy, concern for cosmetic and functional consequences and ability to make accurate diagnosis, pre-operative assessments for planning, and management of routine and complicated post-operative situations. These concerns will be illustrated with several exemplary cases, and opportunities for short-term and subspecialty faculty in PAACS will be discussed.

MedicalMissions.com Podcast
Work Training African Doctors in Pan African Surgical Training

MedicalMissions.com Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2011 47:11


The Pan-African Academy
of Christian Surgeons is a general surgery residency for African national physicians. Founded in 1997, it presently is training 35 residents and has graduated 20 fully trained surgeons. The lessons learned and applicability to similar programs in Africa will be discussed.

Christian Doctor's Digest

Bruce Steffes, MD shares about the Pan African Academy of Christian Surgeons

md pan african academy christian surgeons bruce steffes
MedicalMissions.com Podcast
Residency Training Programs at Mission Hospitals: Obstacles, Challenges, and Blessings

MedicalMissions.com Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2011 49:37


Is it possible to do true academic style residency training at mission hospitals in developing countries? Does the lack of resources and scarcity of mentors result in inferior training and therefore inadequately trained graduates? What governmental or regulatory bodies are involved in non-university based training programs in the developing world? Do short term visiting faculty really make a difference? How can spiritual discipleship be woven into medical and surgical residency training? During this breakout session, Dr. Carol Spears (missionary surgeon and Assistant Program Director at Tenwek Hospital in Kenya) and Dr. Agneta Odera (Kenyan physician in her third year of General Surgery Residency Training at Tenwek) will share their experiences in starting and developing a General Surgery Training Program in partnership with the Pan African Academy of Christian Surgeons. They will share their own stories of challenges, mistakes, areas of ongoing deficiency, as well as helpful hints, blessings, and personal stories. The goal of this session is to provide a minimal set of requirements needed for a successful residency training program and to provide information on resources available to assist new programs. The approach of training others to then go and train others models the example Jesus established in his ministry on earth.