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Skipping the Oscars ceremony for work

By Agence France-Presse in Khartoum, Sudan | China Daily | Updated: 2013-02-23 08:00

 Skipping the Oscars ceremony for work

A nurse and a patient at the Salam Center in Khartoum, Sudan. Gino Strada, an Italian heart surgeon at the medical center, said most patients are young, malnourished and suffering from rheumatic heart disease. Provided to China Daily

Skipping the Oscars ceremony for work

Film about heart center and 8 children seeking surgery gets award nomination

Italian heart surgeon Gino Strada would really rather not be in Los Angeles for Sunday's Academy Awards, where a documentary about the lifesaving work he does in Sudan is up for an Oscar.

"I would prefer to be here and doing surgery," said the head surgeon at the Salam Center in Khartoum, which bills itself as Africa's only high-standard specialist facility offering free open-heart operations.

The hospital is featured in Kief Davidson and Cori Shepherd Stern's Open Heart, one of five films nominated in the Documentary Short category.

The film tells of eight Rwandan children and teens who travel for lifesaving surgery at Salam Center, which is run by the Italian non-governmental organization Emergency.

Strada said most patients are young, malnourished and suffering from rheumatic heart disease.

The condition of chronic damage to heart valves can occur after an acute episode of rheumatic fever, an inflammatory disease that may develop from strep throat.

It virtually disappeared from Europe after the early 1960s because children had access to antibiotics, he explained.

But in Africa, where many people have "never seen a nurse or a doctor in their life", Strada said, rheumatic fever is endemic and leads to the continent's most common form of heart disease, causing an estimated 300,000 deaths a year.

"That's because surgery is not available," said Strada, who appeared deep in thought.

"In Europe you know there is a lot of discussion among politicians: 'We have to send troops here, send troops there because we have to stop this massacre', blah blah blah blah.

"And you have an ongoing massacre of 300,000 per year and no one even mentions it. This is a scandal."

The Rwandans are among hundreds of patients from across Africa who have been treated for free at the 6-year-old hospital, along with thousands of Sudanese.

"We have shown that establishing centers of top quality is feasible in Africa," said the 64-year-old Strada.

Since he helped found Emergency in 1994, the organization has provided free surgical and medical care to victims of war, land mines and poverty around the world.

Salam Center grew out of a philosophy that proper healthcare is a basic human right, not a business, he said.

The modern, spotless hospital would not be out of place in a Western city. It contrasts with the unpaved roads and herds of goats in the surrounding village of Soba in southern Khartoum.

A unique arrangement

On a large table in the hospital's meeting room, a sheet of white paper lists the day's patients - a 20-year-old Sudanese, a 13-year-old Ugandan and another Sudanese, aged 16.

Strada will work on the last patient himself, and she is the focus of his thoughts.

"I'm just thinking about the operation I have to do afterwards. Big mess."

Like the rest of Emergency's work, the hospital is funded by donations.

In what Strada calls a unique arrangement, the Sudanese government also contributes. The authorities confirmed they will provide around $5 million this year, covering 40 percent or more of the hospital's costs, Strada said.

But the sharp devaluation of Sudan's currency since 2011 forced the hospital to reduce the number of annual surgeries from 1,500 to 550 last year. The figure is starting to rise again now, Strada said.

"The nomination for the Academy Award, well, it's maybe a good chance to get this center better known internationally and hopefully to get support," he said, adding that the hospital had no role in planning the documentary.

The film crew was already following the Rwandan children before their acceptance for surgery at the Salam Center, Strada said.

Now he is bracing himself for Hollywood and a few days of "PR activity, or whatever it's called".

But first, his teenage patient is waiting. Rheumatic heart disease has damaged her aortic valve.

There is a smell of burning flesh as Strada and a second Italian surgeon cuts into her chest to expose the beating heart.

Six other foreign and Sudanese medical staff members quietly assist.

Just more than two hours later, they have finished, successfully.

In another part of the hospital, 35-year-old Zaenab Mousa lies in pajamas recovering from the same type of surgery.

"I feel like I'm lucky that I came here," the woman from rural Sudan said. "I hope the film will win."

(China Daily 02/23/2013 page6)

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