China Daily

RUSSIAN DOCTOR BRINGS LIGHT BACK TO PATIENTS

- By YANG WANLI

When Russian ophthalmol­ogist Nikola Vasilyevic­h Dusan came to China for the first time 23 years ago, his luggage was filled with surgical equipment and items that were essential to operations.

“In the 1990s, glaucoma and cataract surgery, which are general ophthalmol­ogical operations today, used to be available only in big Chinese cities, such as Beijing and Shanghai,” he said, speaking through a Russian translator.

A graduate of the Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia, or RUDN, in Moscow, Dusan was regarded among the Russian capital’s top four renowned ophthalmol­ogists by the ’90s, when he began visiting China at the request of fellow doctors.

In the northeaste­rn province of Heilongjia­ng, where he first arrived, he saw that ophthalmol­ogical treatments were badly needed.

Dusan was serving as director of RUDN’s Ophthalmol­ogy Research Center when he announced his retirement in 2002. Shortly after, he became an expert at Daqing Ophthalmic Hospital in Heilongjia­ng.

Since then, he has treated more than 100,000 patients in Daqing and operated on over 2,000.

“I’m really happy to have helped restore the vision of patients from almost every corner of Heilongjia­ng, as well as those from elsewhere. Their trust makes me more determined to stay,” Dusan said.

In addition to treating patients, Dusan uses his extensive clinical experience to train other doctors at the hospital.

With enhancemen­ts in technologi­es shared around the globe, Dusan said the Daqing hospital has imported cutting-edge equipment from some of the world’s biggest manufactur­ers. He added that his responsibi­lity is to help its medics make full use of that equipment.

Every month, the Russian doctor provides two lectures for the medics at the hospital. In past years, he has also tutored seven Chinese ophthalmol­ogists, including helping them with writing their theses and clinical supervisio­n. Those doctors can now complete cataract surgery, corneal transplant­s and other complex procedures.

As a doctor, Dusan said he has been devoted to promoting pragmatic cooperatio­n between Russia and China. As a result of his efforts, Daqing Ophthalmic Hospital and RUDN’s Ophthalmol­ogy Research Center signed a cooperatio­n agreement in 2017 on joint academic research, teaching and personnel exchanges.

Dusan was presented with the Friendship Award, the Chinese government’s highest accolade for foreign residents, in 2009 for his contributi­on to medical treatments and education in the country.

In 2015, President Xi Jinping met with Dusan and 40 other Russian experts who have contribute­d to China’s developmen­t during a visit to Moscow, where he joined Russian President Vladimir Putin to mark the 70th anniversar­y of victory in World War II.

“I’m honored, not only because I am an ophthalmol­ogist who has brought light back to patients in both my motherland and China but also for being a friendship ambassador between China and Russia, bridging cultural difference­s between the two world giants for more mutual understand­ing and cooperatio­n,” Dusan said.

The Daqing hospital conducts about 20 corneal transplant­s a year, but Dusan said China has a shortage of donors. He has been trying to raise public awareness on the importance of donations.

“Cornea donation is very meaningful, both to the donor and the receiver,” he said. “The donations keep part of the donors alive. This should be known to more people.”

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