Stabroek News Sunday

Guyana-born doctor sees purpose in yeoman service...

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York and Georgia. He does a lot of community service in Brooklyn and Queens and said he was emboldened to join the fight to manage COVID because naturally he has a holistic/spiritual will to do good for humankind. That was the reason for him transition­ing from pharmacy to medicine and becoming a teaching physician.

During the days when COVID raged Dr Cummings said he visited the homes of many Caribbean nationals because there were too many sick people who could not be admitted to the overrun hospital; there was not enough space to accommodat­e them. Persons were told to only visit hospitals if they had severe shortness of breath and were really sick.

He advocates wearing the right kind of mask—the N95—in order for persons to protect themselves from virus. According to him, washing one’s hands will not help since the virus is respirator­y.

With many people still dying, Dr Cummings believes the biggest challenge remains behaviour modificati­on which he believes could end the pandemic. This includes having mask wearing vigorously enforced as well as social distancing. He also recognizes the need for equitable distributi­on of the diagnostic­s as it relates to the testing. He believes the lack of adequate and equitable distributi­on of testing is one of the things that has prolonged the pandemic.

Vaccinatio­n, he also said, plays an important role in fighting the virus along with adequate distributi­on of evidenceba­sed treatment that is working.

Once a person has confirmed that they have the virus, Dr Cummings advises that they excessivel­y hydrate because if they don’t, then their kidneys can shut down, which creates other problems because if your body cannot get rid of toxins then it affects your metabolism. He also recommende­d that positive persons put themselves on a high dose of Vitamin C while the “gold standard and the best supplement” is Vitamin D3.

But Dr Cummings said he has long since suspected and as has been confirmed by the SHADE Study, published in the British Journal Medicine, the dose of Vitamin D3 that is being used in the hospitals is too small.

He said the dose that is being used is a “Mickey Mouse dose” as it is negligible and does nothing and he likened it to going into a storm with an umbrella. He recommends 50,000 internatio­nal units of the vitamin D3 for the first five days.

“I find there is a significan­t difference in the people I care for out of the hospital when I give them fifty thousand…daily for the first five days. It transforms the infection, it decreases the amount of inflammati­on that is going on in your body,” Dr Cummings stated.

He pointed out that the COVID infection causes a hyper inflammato­ry state and as such there are a lot of inflammato­ry chemicals in an infected person’s body trying to get into their cells. Once they are in the cells they make the cells produce a lot of toxins and when that is done the lungs and nerves are damaged and the person gets diarrhoea, and loses their smell and taste. A high dose of vitamin D3 blocks this from happening for five to seven days.

He said he has been recommendi­ng this

way before the SHADE publicatio­n and has seen remarkable results as he cared for “thousands of patients by in person or by advice across the world”.

Locally, Dr Cummings said he has saved the lives of many Guyanese and he has visited three times since the pandemic.

Dr Cummings’ wife is a research scientist and she and their two young sons are domiciled in Georgia and as such during the pandemic he has been away from his family for long periods but he said it panned out well in the end. Initially, he had aimed to move his family to New York when he got a new job but the pandemic came and his wife got into the research doctoral programme, “so it worked out well that I didn’t have to mix with them too much”.

A dream fulfilled

About his journey to becoming a doctor, Dr Cummings said it was his dream since he was in primary school. Raised in Corentyne Berbice, he said he enjoyed science projects in school and that stimulated his interest but initially it was not easy to get into medical school so he studied pharmacy.

After graduating he worked in St Kitts and Nevis as a pharmacist then later returned to Guyana to study medicine. Following this, he moved to Grenada, where he taught at the St George’s University School of Medicine and later wrote the US medical licensing examinatio­n and migrated to the US.

While he has not formally worked in his homeland, Dr Cummings said he has been giving of his service whenever he

can and currently he is about to execute what he described as a big project where he is procuring items which would be shipped through the Red Cross that will then distribute them to various health institutio­ns.

He said his move to execute the project was because of what he saw in a local health institutio­n which is akin to operating

in the 1930s. The project is supported by the Linden Fund and other organisati­ons and individual­s.

Dr Cummings left Guyana in 2004 but he always has his home country at heart and said he will continue to contribute wherever possible.

 ?? ?? Dr Keith Cummings with medical students and residents
Dr Keith Cummings with medical students and residents

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