Sunday Mail (UK)

Disaster doc’s cyclone lifeline

Hundreds hurt after flooding

- Jennifer Hyland

A Scottish surgeon raced to Malawi to treat the wounded after the country was battered by Cyclone Freddy.

Aid worker Andy Kent is part of the UK Emergency Medical Team ( EMT) deployed to the impoverish­ed African nation through the Foreign, Commonweal­th & Developmen­t Office as part of the internatio­nal response to the disaster.

Devastatin­g f looding caused by Cyclone Freddy has displaced an estimated 183,000 people across Malawi, Mozambique and Madagascar – killing more than 500 people.

Former military medic Andy – now an orthopaedi­c surgeon based at Raigmore Hospital in Inverness – told of the challenges he’s faced treating casualties at t h e Q ue e n Elizabeth Central Hos pi t a l in B l a nt y r e in southern Malawi.

He said: “A lot of the orthopaedi­c injuries we are treating are people whose houses have fallen in on them due to the flooding. The injuries we are seeing are mainly lower limb long- bone fractures – compl icated injuries where you have open fractures with bones sticking out.

“With the wounds and bone exposed, the risk of infection is significan­t, especially in a country where the risk of infection is already high.

“Sadly, a lot of people have been swept away and drowned before they’ve managed to get to higher ground. If you’ve broken an arm or leg and get washed away, you cannot swim and will drown.

“If you consider there are 500 confirmed dead and 500 still missing, a lot of the people we’ve been treating have lost loved ones and friends. It’s heartbreak­ing.” Brave Andy was awarded an OBE in the King’s New Years Honours list for his humanitari­an work volunteeri­ng with frontline aid charity UK- Med, who supply doctors and nurses to the UK Government’s EMT.

A nd y, w ho h a s previously supported crisis responses in Ukraine , I raq and Beirut, hailed Malawian medics who make the best of their limited resources. He said: “Malawi only has around seven full-time consultant­s or or t hopa ed ic surgeons in the whole country ser v ing 17million, whereas there a r e 16 orthopaedi­c surgeons at Raigmore alone. “There are very welltraine­d surgeons here doing the best they can with limited resources. It is very stressful operating in an environmen­t where you don’t have the equipment you have back in the UK. “Instead of using fancy, very expensive power drills that we use to put screws in, they use normal drills you could buy from B& Q, which they put inside a sterile bag.”

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 ?? ?? VITAL HELP Andy Kent performing surgery in Blantyre, southern Malawi
VITAL HELP Andy Kent performing surgery in Blantyre, southern Malawi
 ?? ?? RESCUE Andy is helping survivors of the disaster
RESCUE Andy is helping survivors of the disaster

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