I have not met Mark Dunne personally, but I know crew who were greatly excited to have this fellow Aussie and his family join the ship. Read his blog on the crew dentist . . .
Last Saturday as we watched the kids play beach
soccer I chatted to the Lead Dentist, Mark Bullock, about his week. I thought I
had had a tough week and was tired after being duty engineer Saturday and
Wednesday, bunkering late on Wednesday plus some frustrations completing some
planned maintenance checks. Then Mark told me about his week which was the
usual of many patients and tooth extractions but included a particularly
challenging patient on Thursday. To give an idea of how busy they have been,
they seen about 1400 patients and conducted about 3100 dental procedures in 7
weeks up to 19Oct13. How does that compare to your dentist?
How often does your dentist save your life?
For most of us the answer is never. Last Thursday a patient arrived at the dental
clinic after patient screening and selection had completed. However the guards
could see the man's need and admitted him. Well this man had a very serious
dental infection that had caused pus to accumulate beneath the floor of his
mouth. Mark described it as grapefruit sized and pushing his tongue up three
inches. This was resulting in his airway being almost completely blocked. The
man could barely breathe and could not lie down as this completely blocked his
airway. This guy was seriously in immediate danger of dying....from a tooth
infection.
So the most immediate concern was to reduce
the swelling in order to clear the his airway. To do this Mark needed to
extract the tooth or teeth causing the infection. But which teeth? They all
looked bad which is apparently pretty common. Anyway the man was able to tell
Mark which side the infection started so he targeted the worst two teeth on
this side. Oh, and by the way, they are not set up for general anaesthetic at
the dental clinic so the whole procedure was done under local anaesthetic. Well
Mark and the other Dentist - Annette - chose correctly and found pus under the extracted teeth. This allowed some
immediate relief but as pus does not drain up (it's a gravity thing) they also
had to establish a drain to drain the pus out which they did successfully. I
didn't quite understand the mechanics of it (being an engineer and not a
dentist) but it sounded challenging enough. After this the man was able to
swallow and was given antibiotics then and there before being sent home.
The man was given instructions to go return
the following day for a follow up check and if it worsened overnight to go to
hospital. However Mark had a sleepless night worrying about his patient who was
okay and turned up on Friday. He was given the same instructions for the
weekend and told to return Monday morning to be checked again, which he did and he was fine.
So I don't know this man nor what he does or
if he has a family. But without Mark's skill he almost certainly would have died. And
if he had a family, they would have been without their primary breadwinner. And
maybe others were reliant on him for their jobs too...so the impact of his
death would have been even greater.
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