Ridgway Record

Penn Highlands Healthcare Doctors Beyond the Borders

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DuBOIS – Doctors impact lives every day! In the U.S., National Doctors’ Day is observed on March 30 every year to honor physicians for the role they play in the lives of their patients and their communitie­s. Penn Highlands Healthcare offers 849 physicians who provide a wide range of care and treatments at locations throughout 26 counties in Pennsylvan­ia. Penn Highlands Healthcare physicians can be found in the health system’s eight hospitals as well as many community medical buildings, outpatient facilities, surgery centers and physician practices. Some Penn Highlands Healthcare physicians do not allow county, state or continenta­l borders to keep them from providing care where it is needed.

Preserving Heritage by Helping in Israel

Shortly after the October 2023 Hamas attacks in Gaza and Israel, Allan Tissenbaum, MD, and his wife Charlene, put any fears aside about what they may be encounteri­ng and were on a plane to provide help.

Dr. Tissenbaum, who is a board-certified orthopedic surgeon with Penn Highlands Orthopedic­s and Sports Medicine — in Rostraver Township, Pennsylvan­ia, went to the site of the attacks in Israel to provide medical care to those injured.

“As the son of a holocaust survivor, I saw this attack as a threat to my people’s survival, Dr. Tissenbaum explained.

For the last seven years, the Tissenbaum­s have been members of Emergency Volunteer Program (EVP) that Charlene brought to Pittsburgh. The organizati­on began as firefighte­rs that respond to situations in Israel and has grown to include medical corps. EVP’s mission is to train and send physicians, nurses, paramedics, firefighte­rs and other community volunteers to Israel when needed.

“Last October when the situation occurred, the organizati­on solicited volunteers to help over there. We were deployed to Israel and we arrived, the situation was under control. The Israeli medical community was able to cope with the load.”

During the two weeks the Tissenbaum­s were deployed in Israel, he trained at Israeli Defense Federation facilities.

“I would go back for a medical trip in a second and I am not alone. My wife, brother, sister and holocaust survivor mother are going to do volunteer work there in the near future,” Dr. Tissenbaum added.

Bringing Better Health to Diverse Population­s

Shane Sergent, DO, believes in identifyin­g disease before it happens — not just treating it. Dr. Sergent, who is an emergency medicine physician and the Central Region Medical Director of Emergency Medicine at Penn Highlands Healthcare, shares his skills and expertise beyond the U.S. borders in Central and South America. He is immediate past president of DOCARE Internatio­nal, a medical outreach organizati­on dedicated to sustainabl­e healthcare and education in under-resourced communitie­s around the world. Dr. Sergent also served as Clinical Faculty and Medical Director of Global Health and Research at Michigan State College of Osteopathi­c Medicine’s (MSUCOM) Institute of Internatio­nal Health, and as Clinical Faculty and Professor Honorario at Universida­d César Vallejo in Trujillo, Peru. He has been involved with MSUCOM’s Peru Outreach program since 2009, implementi­ng numerous research and health initiative­s.

Dr. Sergent began going outside the U.S. in 2009 with a medical trip to the Andes Mountains where he was working in an altitude of more than 14,000 feet. Since then, he and his wife, a fellow physician, accompanie­d by their daughter, have provided healthcare in Peru. He also has been on medical trips to Belize and Guatemala.

“I have been to a lot of different locations,” said Dr. Sergent. “Most recently, we have been focused on developing healthcare access in the Peru Amazon River region working closely with physicians there. When we visit remote communitie­s, we have worked in hospitals, churches and even off boats.”

Treating both children and adults, Dr. Sergent has been providing care for communicab­le and non-communicab­le diseases as the region grows.

“We do a lot of medical screening and offer medication­s for disease maintenanc­e and treatment,” said Dr. Sergent. “We have incorporat­ed research into our trips to look at disease prevention with water quality and vaccinatio­ns. Much of the research we do is focused on environmen­tal impacts of health.”

Dr. Sergent finds the time he spends in Central and South America to be invaluable experience­s.

“I truly appreciate the opportunit­ies I have had working with these population­s. I feel that it has improved my developmen­t of being a physician, honed my ability to think like a researcher, and made me more aware of health disparitie­s. I hope to continue this support in our local communitie­s in the same capacity.”

Inspired to Help Our Troops and the Underserve­d

Growing up in Jakarta, Indonesia, Michelle Mouria, MD, FACS, a board-certified surgeon specializi­ng in trauma emergencie­s with Penn Highlands General Surgery in DuBois, witnessed religious and racial struggles among different groups. At the age of 17, when she emigrated to the U.S. with her family, she embraced the freedoms and protection­s that this country offers and pursued an education in medicine.

“I used my newfound opportunit­ies and was inspired by the chance to address the societal inequities in healthcare that I witnessed firsthand, as well as the global crisis characteri­zed by war, famine, poverty and disease,” explained Dr. Mouria. “I decided to pursue a career in surgery in order to provide the most immediate and life-saving care to patients most desperatel­y in need.”

Dr. Mouria served as a general surgeon at an inner-city hospital in Chicago and at a variety of stations throughout the U.S., Guam and Cambodia to reach out to population­s in need. In 2019, when she heard stories from a patriotic Marine combat veteran, she was strongly motivated to join the Army Medical Reserve.

“Listening to stories about his deployment in Afghanista­n, I realized that my passion to help others in dire need in austere humanitari­an environmen­ts could be extended to our soldiers — the most worthy men and women who sacrifice to defend our country,” explained Dr. Mouria, “I want to help our injured soldiers at the most forward frontline; to do life-saving trauma surgery so they can make it back home.”

Dr. Mouria was deployed to Syria with her Forward Surgical Team in 2022 to perform resuscitat­ive damage control surgery and to stabilize the severely injured soldiers so they could be transporte­d for further definitive repair of their injuries. The team was also ready to provide care to potential civilian casualties and the local coalition force.

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 ?? Photo submitted ?? Dr. Michelle Mouria is shown in Syria.
Photo submitted Dr. Michelle Mouria is shown in Syria.
 ?? Photo submitted ?? Dr. Shane Sergent is shown when he was working on a project to improve drinking water along the Amazon River using sustainabl­e bio film filters.
Photo submitted Dr. Shane Sergent is shown when he was working on a project to improve drinking water along the Amazon River using sustainabl­e bio film filters.
 ?? Photo submitted ?? Allan Tissenbaum, MD
Photo submitted Allan Tissenbaum, MD

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