U.S. Medical Trash Saving Lives In Africa
CBS Evening News: Equipment That Would Land In Garbage Being Put To New Use
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Play CBS Video Video Med Supplies Repurposed Throughout Africa, thousands of patients are turned away because of a shortage of medical supplies and equipment. Dr. Jon LaPook reports on a U.S. organization who's helping give the care they need.
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Before Doc to Dock stepped in, the maternity ward in one Ghanan hospital had next to nothing. Its doctor had delivered 50 to 60 babies a week, but never had a sonogram. (CBS)
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Interactive Fast Facts: North Africa Learn about the people, economy and history of North Africa.
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Interactive HealthWatch Explore health issues including AIDS, cancer and antibiotics.
"We're getting supplies shipped to us from Houston, from Phoenix, from California, from Wisconsin," said cardiologist Dr. Bruce Charash.
In 2005, Charash had an idea: Collect old and unused medical supplies and send them to developing countries. He founded Doc to Dock, a non-profit organization that's sent 12 tons of supplies to countries like Ghana, Ethiopia and Benin.
"Our philosophy is, as long as we're throwing it out, we might as well save lives overseas by giving them to people who need them," Charash said.
"This load right here would've ended up going into the garbage. As you see, you have some equipment here that hasn't even been opened yet. Still completely closed," said one delivery man.
It's a sealed package; but it would have been unable to be used in the United States due to hospital regulations.
One surgical kit contains everything a doctor needs to do an operation - things like gauze pads and syringes. But anything that's not used has to be thrown away, even if it's untouched and totally sterile.
The group takes almost everything, from catheters to IV lines to walkers.
Supplies were recently shipped to the Tepa District Hospital in Ghana. Before Doc to Dock stepped in, the maternity ward in the hospital had next to nothing.
"I'm the surgeon, I'm the obstetrician, and I'm the only gynecologist there," said Dr. Isaac Boateng, who has been delivering 50 to 60 babies a week. But he's never had a sonogram - until now.
"We say that you are going to save millions of people," he said.
America's medical trash is Africa's medical treasure.
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





Africa is the Palestine of the world, and like Israel regarding the Arabs, we are all waiting and watching (and helping) them suffer until the day we can have it all to ourselves to dig and drill to our hearts content. Those inconvenient black folks need to realize we will never treat them as human being and give up their dreams of benefiting fairly from their own natural resources. It all belongs to us, like Palestine belongs to Israel, and we will let it sit there undeveloped until the civil wars we create and sponsor there have freed our land of it''s
pesky, temporary inhabitants. Why else do you think the GOP, most of American business, and every right-wing preacher alive actively supported South African apartheid until too many normal people began a successful boycott of the businesses that cooperated with the apartheid white minority government?? It was later reported that The great Rev. Pat Robertson had been supporting apartheid because he owned several business, including a gold mine that greatly benefited from the slave-like wages of the slave-like black people of the country. Now join me in a verse of our National Anthem. Oh say can you see... Come on, what''s wrong, aren''t you a true patriot? Let''s sing! (Cheney could STILL be watching!!!)
We''re helping out little black babies in Africa...ahhh
We can do better then that, we can end the IMF/World Bank, quit giving them worthless paper Federal Reserve Notes in exchange for their precious resources.
And stop looting their countries with worthless krap-derivatives that are defaulted-debt-contracts structured-finance by Keynesianites on Wall Street.
We can do better then just pat ourselves on the back and ''blow trumpets'' over the fact that we give Africa ''trash they can use''.
Hospitals should be required to change their purchasing systems to eliminate this shameful waste. Then it wouldn''''t cost us so much money for medical treatment. THEN we would be happier, and we''''d be in a better position to afford charitable contributions, too.
Excellent post!!
... have we have become so rich [Republican] that we dont care about our own..
Posted by Gaye5 at 04:34 PM : Dec 25, 2008
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Yes.
Posted by rudy6543 at 02:53 AM : Dec 25, 2008
OMG, We agree on something
We hear that the poor in America are dying because they cant afford medical treatement and millions of dollars worth of perfectly good medical supplies were tipped into the garbage, HOW DISGUSTING... have we have become so rich that we dont care about our own..
Hospitals should be required to change their purchasing systems to eliminate this shameful waste. Then it wouldn''t cost us so much money for medical treatment. THEN we would be happier, and we''d be in a better position to afford charitable contributions, too.
Giving the equipment away overseas is the best solution. And they are people too. A human life saved is a human life saved, regardless of what country they live in.
About Time.....Merry Christmas
I agree totally with Rudy6543 above! These were my thoughts exactly.
To the devil with you and your spam, freak!
- by whitemale08 December 24, 2008 11:30 PM EST
- That''s all about to stop. The United States as a result of the greates financial crisis in modern history will soon be no better off then so-called ''developing'' countries in Africa.
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