During my pregraduate years and undergraduate university
career I explored a wide range of clinical and non-clinical orientated
medical career options in an effort to seek out my talents. This exposure
began at school when I worked as a laboratory assistant for an Anatomic
Pathologist. In my final high school year I worked as a nurse assistant
in the medical and urology wards at a regional academic hospital, and
then later as an operating room assistant.
During my university years I worked at several regional,
and smaller missionary-type hospitals during vacations, assisting in as
much as I was able in a wide variety of specialties, which helped to pay
for medical studies and gain exposure. I was involved with various epidemiological
research studies, community outreach programs and voluntary community
service in both clinical and non-clinical societies during university.
I spent various elective periods with surgeons and plastic
surgeons at university, which stimulated me tremendously to the academic
future and research possibilities in the dynamic subject of plastic and
reconstructive surgery, as well as its sister subjects hand surgery and
cleft-craniofacial surgery both of which I was fortunate enough to be
exposed to.
During my Intern year I spent six months attending the different
surgical specialties, and had six weeks at plastic surgery. During my
spare time I assisted a local cardiothoracic surgeon to extend my clinical
experience.
In my first year after my internship year, I spent a month
in Family medicine, three months in a busy tertiary centre's surgical
and medical intensive care unit, where at any one time there would be
twelve acute patients under my care, simultaneously covering all resuscitation
attempts in a 900-bed hospital.
I spent a year and a half working in the plastic and reconstructive
surgery department of the same school, and gained valuable exposure to
head and neck surgery, and cleft/ craniofacial surgery. During this time
our department performed all microsurgical flap reconstruction as well
as all acute craniofacial trauma repair.
During my time in Pretoria, after the Free-State department
was closed, I spent half the time in reconstructive and cosmetic female
plastic surgery and half in reconstructive and cosmetic male surgery,
and pediatric plastic surgery. Extensive first hand surgical experience
was gained here which was a great privilege, as I had assisted in so much
in my previous position that I could really work on refining technique
and skill in specific procedures. Garankuwa hospital was a 1500 bed hospital
serving an area of approximately 12 million people. Also here after hours
I assisted my senior colleagues often in their private cases. I spent
the first quarter of 2000 in the surgery department, working both in pediatric
and general surgery rotations, where I had wide exposure to a range of
pediatric pathology and adult trauma.
Further documentation of accredited courses as well as my
logbook of more than 500 surgeries performed, with an excess of a further
300 assistances is available on request.