Medicine@Yale Magazine

Medicine@Yale.

August/September 2005   Volume 1 Issue 2

Inside this issue

Cover stories

YALE PROJECTS FOR GLOBAL HEALTH RECEIVE MAJOR FUNDING

Mouse breakthrough will speed vaccines

Finding new perfumes to foil a femme fatale

A new front in the war on antibiotic-resistant bacteria

New look at how resistant bugs dodge drugs

From the pages of Cell to The Tonight Show’s stage

Using laser light, team guides flies by remote control

Applera Corp. boosts education

Fund will honor mentor, aid students

Partnerships

A quest to detect earliest signs of autism

Yale visit brings hope to paralyzed veterans

Grants and contracts

People

Lifelines: Arthur Horwich, seeking what’s never been seen.

New president of alumni body sees a bright future ahead

Out & about

Awards & honors

Science

Connecticut’s $100 million stem cell program good news for Yale

Advances: Taking a toll on parasitic infections | New kidney discovery may help heart | A chink in malignant melanoma’s armor?

Health

Ovarian cancer test exposes quiet killer

From humble start at Yale, REMEDY thrives

Advances: Patient to surgeon: I hear a symphony

Education

Student explorations in the world of research

Notable teachers receive high honors at Commencement

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From humble start at Yale, REMEDY thrives

In 1991, after several volunteer missions to Latin America, anesthesiologist William H. Rosenblatt, M.D., made an observation that was to have far-reaching effects: many of the hospitals he visited were in dire need of medical supplies, while at Yale-New Haven Hospital (YNHH) many of those same supplies were discarded without being used.

Thus was born REMEDY (Recovered Medical Equipment for the Developing World), a nonprofit committed to recovering surplus medical supplies and teaching others how to do it.

Rosenblatt photo.

William H. Rosenblatt, M.D. (left), and students prepare a shipment at REMEDY's New Haven headquarters.

What started as a local program at YNHH to collect opened but unused surgical supplies—which have never touched a patient but can’t be reprocessed due to liability concerns—has grown into a grass-roots organization involving hundreds of hospitals around the United States. From Yale alone, the REMEDY program has donated more than 30 tons of medical supplies to hospitals overseas. “Each of these pieces of material, whether it be a suture, a glove or a sponge, is going to wind up in another part of the world and be useful,” says Rosenblatt. The program has also saved the hospital over $30,000 in disposal costs since its inception, at a cost of only about $200 per year for disinfecting and bagging the supplies.

Today, REMEDY trains hospitals to organize their own programs and has helped 358 hospitals begin recovery activities. The organization provides teaching packets free of charge, and with Yale’s Office of International Health, has developed a notification program called AIRE-mail, in which medical supplies donated by hospitals and vendors are advertised via e-mail to 125 nonprofit humanitarian organizations. It has also developed a catalog called the REMEDY Atlas, consisting of the 240 supplies most often recovered, which will help ensure that recipients are getting supplies they need.

Meanwhile, the collecting, sorting, packing and shipping of surplus medical supplies has largely been taken over by students. In 2001, RYSA (REMEDY at Yale Students Association) was started by Jonathan S. Cohen, PA-C, a physician associate who is now a surgical resident at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. Between last August and January, RYSA volunteers shipped 3,500 pounds of supplies from the New Haven area to eight countries. Information about the program is available on the Web at www.remedyinc.org.  

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