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Right to Health Care program brings Haitian boy to Boston for skull
surgery
By Max Bearak
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Dumanel Luxama a few days after
surgery
to repair a hole in the front of his skull |
In a cozy, sunny room on the ninth floor of Children’s Hospital in Boston,
11-month-old Dumanel Luxama happily coos and chortles as his father Almane
stands beside him. Just a few days earlier, the little Haitian boy had undergone
major surgery to prevent brain tissue from bulging through a hole in his skull.
Dumanel was born with a frontal
encephalocele, a rare neurological defect. An irregular hole in the calvarium,
or “skull
cap,” allows
brain tissue to protrude, resulting in an abnormally shaped head. Dumanel’s
condition can be repaired in developed countries. But the operation cannot
be performed in Haiti due to lack of funds, equipment and proper training.
When Dumanel was born last fall, Almane sold a piece of land and used the
proceeds to buy a bus ticket to take his baby to Zanmi Lasante’s hospital in Cange, more than half
a day’s journey from their home in Ti Riviere. Almane left behind his
wife and his home in hopes of saving his boy.
“I am a proud father and
he is my son," he said. "It is my duty to take care of him."
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Dumanel Luxama with his father Almane
and Dr, John Meara before surgery |
On
a visit to Haiti in March, Children’s Hospital's Plastic
Surgeon-in-Chief, Dr. John Meara, noticed Dumanel in the Zanmi Lasante hospital.
Dr. Meara and other doctors donated their time and worked with PIH
to organize free care for Dumanel at Children’s Hospital.
Through its Right to Health Care program, PIH has a history of bringing patients
who cannot be treated at local sites to larger, better-equipped hospitals in
the U.S. and elsewhere. The program demonstrates PIH’s commitment
to the human right to health care and embodies the organization’s mission
statement: “When
a person in Peru, or Siberia, or rural Haiti falls ill, PIH uses all of the
means at our disposal to make them well...Whatever it takes. Just as we would
do if a member of our own family—or we ourselves—were ill.”
When Dumanel reached Boston, doctors discovered that he had another serious
medical complication—an arachnoid cyst in his brain. The cyst, a collection
of the fluid that bathes the brain, was about the size of an apple and would
have to be drained during Dumanel’s
surgery in Boston.
“It was good that we brought him up to Boston in time," Meara said. "The
cyst could
have caused dangerous pressure on the brain."
Over
almost ten painstaking hours, Meara, a reconstructive surgeon, and
Dr. Ed Smith, a neurosurgeon, operated on both the cyst and the encephalocele.
Meara described the procedures as “extremely successful, yet very
difficult.”
Dumanel
stayed in the hospital for about two weeks after his surgery. He and his father
will probably remain in Boston for several more months in case any complications
arise.
For
now, the Luxamas’ medical journey continues. Almane will continue to sleep
on the cot beside Dumanel’s crib and Dumanel’s mother will keep waiting
eagerly for her husband’s daily call so she can listen to the reassuring
and joyful laughter of her baby.
[published September 2008]
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