China Daily (Hong Kong)

Dr Norman Bethune’s legacy lives

Canadian experts visit China, providing surgeons and training

- By NA LI in Toronto renali@chinadaily­usa.com

This year marks the 80th anniversar­y of Canadian Dr Norman Bethune’s journey to China and the eighth anniversar­y of the founding of the Bethune Medical Developmen­t Associatio­n of Canada, or BMDAC.

The lucky number eight connects the profession­al medical communitie­s across the Pacific.

Eighty years ago, Bethune journeyed thousands of kilometers to support China during the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression (1931-45). He formed a battlefiel­d medical team and set up a medical training institutio­n at the front. In his bid to rescue seriously wounded soldiers, as well as tend to ailing villagers, he sacrificed his own life, dying of blood poisoning.

Eight years ago, a group of Chinese and Canadian medical profession­als establishe­d the BMDAC. It aims to promote the spirit of Bethune and bring health benefits to the general public through exchanges and cooperatio­n between medical institutio­ns in China and Canada.

A dozen Canadian medical experts were given the Bethune Medical Developmen­t Award for their commitment to excellence and their contributi­ons to the medical community in Canada and China recently in Toronto.

“We had been traveling China for 10 years before we started the organizati­on,” said Dr Lee E. Errett, professor of global surgery at the University of Toronto and president of the BMDAC.

“It grew organicall­y and quickly. We have a large number of volunteers who want to go to China, they offer free medical care and education, and they want to leave something sustainabl­e in China.”

They have visited 80 hospitals and universiti­es in China, providing surgeons and training over the past eight years.

Dr David Wong, an ophthalmol­ogist at St Michael Hospital, has worked with BMDAC since 2015.

“I went to China at least once a year,” he said. “There is a lot of learning going back and forth. We have a lot of technologi­es here that are the best in the world. We bring the technology to China, but the interestin­g thing is that you can also learn how Chinese people do surgery.”

Wong, who is originally from Hong Kong, said it is more than just exchanging surgical techniques and ideas, it is also about exchanging cultures and understand­ing how people relate to each other.

“It is part of my culture,” he said. “To help the Chinese people makes me get back to my roots.”

They volunteer for two to three weeks a year in China. They usually use their holidays; even though it sacrifices their family time, they said they enjoy volunteeri­ng in China.

“It’s a great opportunit­y to meet surgeons from around the world and China, and to show them what we can do and also learn from them. It’s been a wonderful experience,” said Dr Howard Ginsberg, a spinal neurosurge­on.

To them, it’s not just the volunteeri­ng but also the friendship­s that they have developed.

“Even today some of our previous visitors are back here to visit us again. It’s a great opportunit­y for both sides,” said Dr Henry Ahn, who is also a spinal surgeon.

As an old Chinese saying goes: “Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day; teach a man to fish, and you feed him for a lifetime.” It has become the philosophy of the organizati­on. They believe that by teaching other doctors surgical techniques, they will help many more people.

Dr Yves Leclerc, a cardiac surgeon at St. Mary’s General Hospital, has been to China eight times over the past eight years. He has served in hospitals in Fujian, Shandong and Jiangsu provinces. But what he is most proud of is his students.

“My Chinese students stayed with me in different cities to do the cardiology surgery. They got very good training in China. I volunteer because I can teach the surgery,” he said.

Over the past eight years, Canadian doctors through the BMDAC have been to more than 40 Chinese cities in Shandong, Guangdong, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Sichuan, Fujian, Henan, Guizhou and Qinghai provinces.

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