It's Brain Surgery
Send a text [https://www.buzzsprout.com/twilio/text_messages/2541721/open_sms] Imagine being the only neurosurgeon in a country of over 8 million people. No backup. Limited equipment. Families raising money before life-saving surgery can begin. That is Dr. Alieu Kamara’s daily reality in Sierra Leone. In this episode, Dr. Kamara shares how growing up during the civil war shaped him, why he left a secure post abroad to return home, and what it takes to make life-or-death decisions when resources are thin. We talk trauma care, CT access, weekends in the OR, training the next generation, and what kind of help would actually move the needle. This conversation is not about outrage. It is about responsibility, courage, and practical ways to support care where it is most needed. What we cover: Being the only neurosurgeon in the country Childhood during the civil war and the path to medicine Training in China and the decision to return home Daily workload, burnout risk, and mindset under pressure Trauma, tumors, and what happens when patients cannot pay Imaging, blood, and the long list of missing tools Building capacity: CT installation, future C-arm, training plans How international colleagues and organizations can help Chapters (add timestamps after upload) Intro Civil war childhood Training abroad and coming home Life as the only neurosurgeon Trauma care, imaging, and costs Building a service and training others How to help About Dr. Allieu Kamara Neurosurgeon, Connaught Hospital, Freetown, Sierra Leone. Focused on neurotrauma and building sustainable neurosurgical care in a low-resource setting. How to support Interested clinicians: short volunteer stints, case discussion, remote consults Donors and partners: consumables, imaging support, instruments, C-arm, training funds
12 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y forma parte de la comunidad de It's Brain Surgery!