When Minata arrived at Koutiala Hospital for Women and Children in Mali with severe cramping and internal bleeding, surgeons used a new ultrasound machine provided by Medical Teams International. They determined that she had an ectopic pregnancy—a baby growing outside the uterus. Dr. Dan Nesselroade, the hospital’s lead OB/GYN, and four other residents began operating immediately. Nearly a day and seven blood transfusions later, including a transfusion from Medical Teams International volunteer Dr. William Marks, Minata emerged from her ordeal. "Just a few days later I watched her walk out of the hospital," says Dr. Marks, who says these types of emergencies are quite rare and has seen only one case in his 30-year medical career. "Having access to ultrasound will allow earlier and more accurate diagnoses of ectopic pregnancies," he says.
Dr. Marks works as a radiologist in Seattle, Washington, and recently took a month off to volunteer with Medical Teams International in southern Mali. He spent his time training hospital staff to use a portable ultrasound machine the size of a laptop computer that will be used at the N'Torosso health clinic . Medical Teams International purchased the refurbished machine from SonoSite, using funds from generous donors. "The machine is generations better than the equipment they had at the hospital," says Dr. Marks.
Using a solar panel on the roof of the N'Torosso health clinic, staff will be able to power the portable ultrasound machine. The ultrasound machine can be powered using conventional electricity, batteries and even solar energy. An electrical engineer helped the team set up solar panels on the roof of one of the hospital’s six outlying health clinics—and the team proceeded to conduct a solar-powered ultrasound on a pregnant woman. This N’Torosso clinic is several miles from any formal power source and has never before had access to a piece of diagnostic equipment. "We explained to the people that the initial ultrasound was a pilot and that Dr. Pierre Kamate, whom I spent time training, would be back to the clinic with the equipment soon," says Dr. Marks.