Neurosurgery resident awarded Fulbright fellowship to improve care in West Africa

After spending the last year virtually connecting with government and community leaders, one resident will soon travel 5,000 miles to West Africa to help bring much-needed neurosurgery resources to a public hospital.
, a fourth-year neurosurgery resident in the , has been awarded a Fulbright Program fellowship to conduct a needs assessment at a hospital in Sierra Leone.
Still has long been passionate about global health, in part due to growing up with three adopted siblings whose medical issues led to them being put up for adoption as infants in their native countries.
鈥淔rom a very early age, I was exposed to the concept that not having access to medical care can have a profound impact on people鈥檚 lives and families,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e grew up very blessed in the Midwest, but that鈥檚 not the case everywhere.鈥
During medical school at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Still had the opportunity to combine her interests in neurosurgery and global health by completing rotations at medical centers in France, Cambodia and Morocco. In Sierra Leone, Still will collaborate with local leaders to help establish the first public neurosurgery department in a city where this kind of specialization isn鈥檛 available. Together, the team will review patient charts to determine the most crucial neurosurgery cases.
After Still鈥檚 seven-month stint in Sierra Leone, the department will reintroduce two neurosurgeons 鈥 who are away completing their residencies 鈥 to the hospital to begin their practices. The goal, Still said, is to set the team members up for success so they can hit the ground running when the physicians return.
鈥淥ne of the questions we ask a lot in global health is, 鈥楬ow can people from high-resource settings come into these conversations and projects in a way that鈥檚 sustainable and ethical?鈥欌 Still said. 鈥淚 hope what we鈥檙e doing here is assisting these physicians and leaders so they can continue running the department smoothly and growing it after we leave.鈥
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Media contact: Emily Mavrakis at emilyannm505@ufl.edu or 239-839-5275.
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