| Operation Open
Heart
Visit to Fiji |
2002.10.30
   
First
Day Cover:
4 stamps
Printing: Offset
Lithography
Paper: 110 gsm stamp grade paper
Watermark: unwatermarked
Gum: PVA
Stamp size: 30 x 48 mm
Perforation: 13 per 2cm
Values: 34c, 69c, $1.17, $2
Format: vertical / horizontal
Sheet: 50(2x25)
Graphic Designer: Cadillac Production
Artist: George Bennett
Text: Amanda Waqa
Printers: Cartor Security Printer, France
34c: The heart team
surgeons, Dr
Ian Nicholson & Dr Stuart Menzie operate on a patient.
69c: Dr Alan Gale, cardiothoracic surgeon, attends to a patient post
operatively. Dr Gale was awarded an order of Fiji in 2000 for his
service to the Fiji islands.
$1.17: Ms Beverly Jacobsen, of Agllent Technologies uses the colour
echocardiograph to diagnose a patient's condition.
$2.00: Anethetist, Dr David Baines & Gabrielle Scarfe prepare a
patient for theatre.
The Operation Open Heart Fiji Team has been visiting Fiji since 1990.
The 2002 visit marks the eleventh visit by the Team to the Fiji
Islands. Jointly coordinated by the Sydney Adventist Hospital and the
Adventist Development Relief Agency (ADRA) and supported by AusAid
through the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons Pacific Islands
Project and the Fiji Ministry of Health, the project brings hope each
year to the many Fiji patients who receive open heart surgery during
the visit. The project is also supported by a local Cardiac Taskforce,
which is staffed by volunteers from the Colonial War Memorial Hospital,
AusAid Health Management Reform project and the private sector.
The project provides a fully equipped cardiac (heart surgery) surgical
team, staffed by Australian medical and nursing staff and from medical
supply companies who assist in providing urgently needed skills and
equipment. Team members volunteer both their time and expertise and pay
their own airfares to participate in the project. The Fiji Cardiac
Taskforce, assisted by the Fiji Ministry of Health as well as local
corporate and individual sponsors, provides financial and in-kind
support for the team during their stay such as accommodation, transport
and meals.
Operation Open Heart Fiji provides urgently needed cardiac (heart)
surgery for Fiji patients who cannot afford to receive the life-saving
treatment overseas. The cost of such surgery if undertaken overseas
ranges between $10,000 and $20,000. In addition to pacemaker implants
the team treats patients suffering from congenital heart defects such
as "hole in the heart" to severe conditions such as "blue baby
syndrome". Another major component of the surgical program is the
treatment of rheumatic heart valve diseases such as valve repair, the
opening of valve narrowing and the replacement of severely damaged
valves with artificial plastic valves.
In 2002, a team of 42 medical personnel from 17 hospitals from around
Australia came to Fiji. During the visit, the team cardiologists saw
149 patients in the cardiac clinic. Surgery was performed on 34 (16
children and 18 adults) patients during the 2-week visit, all of whom
made a full recovery from their surgery and now have a greater chance
at leading healthy and productive lives.
The 2002 Operation Open Heart visit was marked by a number of
milestones for the project, including the successful repair of a hole
in the heart for Baby Ravneel from Labasa. Baby Ravneel was just 6
weeks old and weighed just 2.5kg, the youngest and smallest patient to
be treated by any of the visiting heart teams. Baby Ravneel's surgery
was highly successful with his family now able to look forward to him
leading a healthy and active life. The 2002 visit also saw surgery
being conducted on the 300th patient under the project. The patient, a
38-year old woman from Suva successfully underwent the repair of a hole
in her heart.
In addition to performing life-saving surgery, the project also aims to
provide ongoing education and training for local medical, nursing and
allied health staff, to assist local doctors with the diagnosis and
treatment of heart disease patients and to contribute to preventative
health programs in Fiji. During the course of the visit, team members
conducted formal lectures at the Fiji School of Medicine as well as
informal bedside training with nursing staff from the CWM Hospital.
The ongoing work of Operation Open Heart Fiji has transformed many
lives in Fiji - both of the patients themselves and their families.
Without Operation Open Heart many of these patients would not have
survived and at best, most would not be able to lead the active and
productive lives that they are now leading. Thanks to Operation Open
Heart Fiji, more than 300 patients can live a life free of the constant
burden of poor health and illness.
In 2001, the President of Fiji, the Honourable Ratu Josefa Iloilo,
formally honoured 2 of the team members for their longstanding and
dedicated contribution to the "' people of the Fiji Islands. Mrs
Annette Baldwin, Nursing Executive Officer of the Sydney Adventist
Hospital, and Dr Alan Gale, Cardiothoracic Surgeon were both awarded
the Order of Fiji, in recognition of their outstanding service.
Operation Open Heart Fiji continues to touch the lives of many. In the
words of Dr Alan Gale, cardiothoracic surgeon and visiting team member,
"Of all surgical categories, cardiac surgery is one of the most complex
and one for which success is very much reliant on a team effort.
Without the efforts of each and every team member as well as that of
local medical personnel, the success of this year's visit would not
have been possible."
Operation Open Heart Fiji is scheduled to return to Fiji in 2003,
offering new hope to heart disease patients and their families.

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