Louisville Medicine Volume 65, Issue 3 | Page 20

ON THE COVER Courtney Nanney CCE T hanks GLMS Foundation and Hand in Hand Ministries for allowing me to join your Nicaragua mission trip for the eighth time. Each trip gets better and better. As the only biomedical engineer on the trip, it can be rather challenging. Fortunately, the clinicians on the trip jumped in to help. Dr. Tyler Ball fixed a surgical microscope and a lab mi- croscope. When we couldn’t find a light bulb for a colposcope, Dr. Cindy Rigby and Dr. Manuel Grimaldi played “MacGever” (Spanish pronunciation of “MacGyver”). We attached a bright flashlight to the camera using hair scrunches. It worked and was much cheaper than the $300 bulb. It is nice going year after year. You learn what to bring and what helps. You develop friendships across borders and languages. My first year, I fixed medical equipment at the dermatology hospital and the children’s hospital. The next year, I returned to find much of the equipment broken again. I decided the only way to keep this going was to teach the folks how to fix their own equipment. 18 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE I also added a maternal/child hospital and a neuro/ortho hospital to my to-do list. I found technical folks at each hospital who were talented on some types of equipment. However, the hospitals and technicians were not talking and learning from each other. After much work from the local folks, we were able to form the NBA (Nicaragua Biomedical Association). We had our first meeting three years ago. I taught on electrical safety and electrosurgery. We had folks attend from Managua (30 attendees). Last year, we met and had 50 attendees from around Nicaragua. This year we met at “UNI,” the Nicaragua Engineering University. We had 70 people with two visiting professors from El Salvador. One of the team, Jane Howland, introduced the group to lab quality control. At the end of the three-day meeting, UNI announced that they would be offering a B.S. program in Biomedical Engineering starting this summer. Thanks for your faithful support. You are making a difference in the lives of the mission teams and the Nicaraguans. Courtney Nanney is a Biomedical Engineer at KentuckyOne.