Friday, 26 February 2010

The Wonderful World Of The Worried Well





For many doctors, including Dr Da Vinci, the line between patients and friends is very blurred. People in her neighbourhood i.e her neighbours attend their local hospital therefore become her patients, sometimes patients become friends and all of her friends ask for her medical advice before going to see their doctors, so most of her friends are patients.

Dr Da Vinci has diagnosed her housemate with diabetic nephropathy when she saw his urine, after he forgot to flush the toilet one day. She also diagnosed him with sleep apnoea when she crept into his room whilst he was asleep to steal a razor to shave her legs.

Many members of Dr Da Vinci's family prefer to have their cosmetic surgical treatments done by her as well.

However, 99.9% of the people who ask Dr Da Vinci for ad hoc medical advice have nothing wrong with them. They are the worried well.

For example; take her beloved friend and valued mentor the Tech Guy (TG). TG is a tech entrepreneur approaching his 40's he has run several highly successful Tech enterprises and is continually brain-storming new ideas. His take on life, skills set, cultural awareness, openness and intellect make him a pleasure to be around.

However, he suffers from back pain. There are no red or yellow flags, he is in his forties and has spent a large part of his life in front of computers. Any doctor could tell him after examining him that it is highly likely this is mechanical back pain. Any doctor could tell him that most back pain is not due to any serious disease.

Mechanical back pain is pain originating from muscles, ligaments and small facet joints when they are strained. This can follow injury, poor posture or inactivity.Sometimes aches and pains can last for a long time, but that doesn’t mean it’s serious. It does usually settle eventually – even though it is frustrating that no one can predict exactly when.

Most people can get going quite quickly even when they still have some pain. Your back is designed for movement: it needs movement – a lot of movement. The sooner you get moving and doing your ordinary activities as normally as possible, the sooner you will feel better.The people who cope best with back pain are those who stay active and get on with life despite the pain.

Every doctor knows this. But because TG is in the top tax bracket it is lucrative to offer him unnecessary tests, for diagnoses that can be almost completely ruled out by a thorough history and clinical examination.

You see the actual cost of an ECG(Heart Trace) is about £1, but many private clinics charge over £100 for this test. So it makes doing tests profitable.

Therefore, because my friend TG was able to pay for his X-ray, CT and MRI, he got them. The doctor knew they were going to be normal, but he got them anyway, because it makes the practice money to do these tests.If you have pots of money and you demand a scan somebody somewhere in the world will do it for you. They really should weigh up the risks and the benefits on your behalf before embarking on loads of tests, but money talks.

Big Business has never succeeded in making a profit from the medical care of poor, sickly folk. If you are looking for profitability in health care you need to contrive to make the wealthy worried well even more worried and in the process milk as much money as you can out of them.

Mr TG's kitchen is lined with an array of various snake oil's to promote 'physical and mental well-being' you can find everything from the extract of Antartican polar bears liver to the exlir derived from the bill of a platypus, all promising 'increased concentration', 'improved circulation' or 'enhanced lymphatic drainage'.

Dr Da Vinci thinks that making her company a social enterprise: applying market-based strategies to achieve a social purpose, is an ideal model for providing healthcare solutions as it ensures that any profits gained are funnelled back into healthcare that benefits those i.e the elderly,the poor, the dying, that need it, the most as well as creating initiatives to improve the quality of medical education in the country.

So Mr TG dear, the doctors prescription is keep your back moving, 2 weeks of ibuprofen, perhaps some massage therapy, less desk work and NO more radiation!

Thursday, 25 February 2010

Major Trauma Care In England 'not good enough'



According to last weeks article in Headway which you can read it here

I've worked in trauma/ITU both in the UK , in Singapore and in Japan now, all developed countries and one of the comments particularly interests me.

care should be led by consultants experienced in major trauma, but major trauma is most likely to occur at night-time or at weekends when consultants are not present in emergency departments


The main reason why there are so many trainees not experienced in major trauma in the UK is because there frankly isn't that much of it about. I see more trauma in a week working in Lagos/J-Burg that most trainees see a decade. But yet the training systems seem so against letting UK doctors take a year/rotation out and seem all too intensely focused on the bureaucratic, form-filling, box-ticking operation that medical training in the UK has become.

I think there maybe many advantages to actually encouraging trainees especially in departments such as A+E, T+O and infectious disease to take a gap year or do a 4-month rotation in another country.

In my opinion, spending a few months exposed to, living and working immersed in another culture is worth more than 100 of those communication workshops they put us through. In addition to this, these countries are usually developing/3rd world countries who could benefit immensely from the expertise of a doctor from a more developed country.

The options for taking time out are currently fraught with bureaucracy. I don't really understand why since this is something that could improve the technical skill and level of experience for UK doctors especially in Trauma.

Knowledge Foundation Interview: Transcript

Tell us about your childhood?

I grew up for the most part in a little town called Lowestoft with my foster parents. So I actually have four wonderful parents.
I lived with my Caucasian parents, my biological sister, my two Indian brothers, my two Caucasian brothers and our poodle Benjamin (named after Benjamin Britten one of Lowestoft’s most famous exports). There were a few other temporary foster siblings’ in the house over the years as well.
Lowestoft is in my mind one of England’s finest seaside towns, my earliest memories are of chimneys, sea air, punch and judy shows and our amazing beach.
I had a wonderful childhood and I’m grateful to my four parents for that.

Who is your biggest inspiration?


Unfair question!! *smile* I don’t think I could just choose one person because so many people inspire me in such different ways.

My parents- I use that term to refer to the entire multiracial quartet, inspire me. I have an uncle who I also refer to as my father, Mr Dele Adesina, he reminds me of the value of hardwork, integrity and determination, he is one of the foremost lawyers in Nigeria and one of my most valued mentors.

I have a research interest in stem cells, so Professor Yamanaka from Japan is my medical research role model. When he and his team discovered how to re-programme normally functional cells back into stem cells he changed the face of stem cell research forever. He is an innovator and a visionary.

I am also very inspired by the arts. Andy Warhol, Damien Hirst, Takashi Murakami are a few people I rate extremely highly.
In politics, Ingrid Betancourt, Aung San Suu Kyi , Condelleza Rice, Hilary Clinton and Angela Merkel continue to challenge my thoughts, opinions and aspirations as they raise the bar for women in general.

But what characteristics bring all these people together? I suppose I’m inspired by dedication, persistence, strength of character and intelligence. And these are traits that all of these amazing individual’s possess.


What does Flying Doctors Nigeria do?


The Flying Doctors Nigeria has already been quoted as the ‘single most influential innovation in the Nigerian healthcare system this decade’. It is the first social enterprise in the whole of West Africa to provide cost-effective, rapid, effective critical care solutions via air ambulance to the medical emergencies across the country.

With our helicopter and four doctors we aim to save 1000 lives this year alone.
1000 children, fathers, best-friends, uncles, cousins, grandparents and sisters.
I’m just thankful for the privilege of being involved. But I can’t thank those that have supported me enough. From my board of directors, to the BBC, to Virgin Unite, to the UK schools that have put on fundraisers for us, to the doctors/medical students and professors that have helped us design protocols volunteering their time and energy.

Thank you all!


How did your interest in being a doctor begin?


Mainly because my younger sister suffered a lot with sickle cell anaemia as a child and I was around hospitals and doctors a lot.

Through school I was a science geek and in many ways still am.

As a teenager, I never dated or went out to parties. I loved the textbooks! I read so much in school that I actually became popular for my geekiness. I studied so much that I ran out of textbooks to read.

I live with my best friend now and it’s perfectly normal for him to come in from work and find me practicing my tiny sutures with a magnifying glass and a bloody pigs foot.

What do you like to do to relax?


I’m a big formula 1 fan, I love going to watch the races if I can. If I don’t I never miss the live race on TV.

I like spa therapies: massages, facials, pilates, I think this are important for overall well-being as I take a holistic view to health in general.

I like music; Jazz and soul in particular. I suppose it’s part of the reason why I love Tokyo and Prague so much.............because of the Jazz clubs. They tell me the best Jazz scene is in New York though. I’ve never stepped foot on American soil, believe it or not, but I’m looking forward to exploring the New York jazz scene at some point.

I’m a massive foodie and an extremely bad example for my patients in terms of my diet. I love cheeses, Italian, Tapa’s, Brazilian BBQ’s and Japanese food especially tempura.

I only recently realised the enormous value of having a good work life-balance. I have also realised the value of having a good set of friends around you (Helen, Odera, Kana, Wole , Kemi, Sharmin, Petra ,Thank you!), to tell you when work is taking over and remind you too relax.


Do you think it is important to be ambitious?


Ambition is the desire to be rich, successful or powerful. It’s a word that is subject to various interpretations.

I think personal happiness and fulfilment are important. True success is about a
passion to create a better world, live a life that you can look back on and be truly proud of.

Ambition may be an extremely valuable tool in achieving this.

How does the health emergency system in Nigeria compare with the UK?


I couldn’t agree more with Oscar Wilde when he says,

It often happens that the real tragedies of life occur in such an inartistic manner that they hurt us by their crude violence, their absolute incoherence, their absurd want of meaning, their entire lack of style.


I refer to the death of my 12 year old sister due to the absence of critical care facilities in Nigeria.

It was a horrible way to find out that the nearest air ambulance service was in South Africa, over eight hours away. That the mortality for head injuries in states outside Lagos and Abuja was 100% because there are hardly any neurosurgeons working outside those areas. And that the first time an air ambulance in Nigeria was proposed was in 1960 by the British, then again in the 1980’s, but no one had taken this idea forward.

My sister was one of the thousands of sisters, brothers, mothers and grand-parents that died ever day because they couldn’t get to the hospital quick enough.

As I researched further, I realised that I could apply many of the skills I learned in the UK to the Nigerian healthcare system.

Our business model is already being talked about as a potential solution for providing critical care solutions in countries across Africa, Asia and Latin America.

Compared to the UK? We’ve got a lot of catching up to do. Flying Doctors is just the beginning of a massive overhaul of our emergency care service in Nigeria.

Nigeria is in the news for many negative reasons what are the common misconceptions and indeed what do you love about Nigeria?

My first trip back to Nigeria since I was a child was last year. It was my first time back since my sister died and I had as much of a culture shock as any other visitor would.

My initial impression was that the entire country operated in a moral vacuum, where anything goes. My first impulse was to run back home to my comfortable NHS job, with all its familiarity and calm. I think that feeling is natural, we have to force ourselves out of our comfort zones to really challenge ourselves.

It was only after I got over this initial hurdle that I was able to see what Nigeria was really about. I’ve lived in all over England and in Japan and I’ve travelled Asia, Europe and other parts of Africa. If there is one thing I’ve learn it’s how much we have to gain from learning about other cultures, each culture having its own unique set of weaknesses and it’s own astounding strength’s.

Nigeria is a breath-takingly beautiful country with a wealth of natural resources. People are extremely open and go out of their way to help. The adult literacy rate as estimated by UNICEF is nearly 80%. Nigeria is spewing with highly educated, bright young graduates from both the sciences and the arts.

Nigeria is also a country with incredibly rich culture particularly with regard to the arts. Its inhabitants are extremely diverse; the plethora of different backgrounds and traditions is paraded proudly in cosmopolitan centres such as Lagos State.

Nigeria’s problems centre around poor leadership, but having met several state governor ‘s and heard their plans for the healthcare systems in their states, I think we’ll begin to see some real positive change over the next few months to years.


What is your current career, where are you working?

I am a doctor trained at the University of York, I did my post-graduate training in the West Midlands. I have a specialist interest in Pre-hospital and Trauma care, but I also hold membership with the American Academy of Aesthetic Medicine.

I was awarded the prestigious MEXT government scholarship this year and am working in Tokyo doing stem cell research, where my team and I are making unprecedented breakthroughs in the field of regenerative medicine.

I have an office in Nigeria with several members of staff and travel there regularly for meetings and negotiation regarding my Flying Doctors service. I manage the Flying Doctors Service currently and consult for various government agencies and private companies on both aesthetic medicine and emergency medicine.



Where do you see yourself in 5 years time?


Hopefully married. I love to travel, I’d like to adopt a few kids, but most of all in five years time I like to be able to look back, by that time a fully-fledged diagnostic savant and know I’d been instrumental in changing the face of healthcare in Nigeria for good.

Do you get back home often?

I try, I really do.....although I suspect my mum would beg to differ.

Monday, 22 February 2010

The Knowledge Fountain Magazine

On the subject of Black Entrepeneurship, I've just been asked by to an interview for the largest and fastest growing Black Business Magazine in the UK.

Going to trot along there and will post the transcript when I'm done.

Say tuned for the next part of my BBC radio interview with Lesley Dolphin in the next few weeks also will be putting the podcast and the transcript on this blog also.

I used to DJ for the hospital radio in London before I started medical school. Still getting used to being on the other side!

http://www.knowledgefountain.co.uk/

Friday, 12 February 2010

The Rise And Rise Of Black British Entrepeneurs




The black business community forms a vital part of London's economy. Today there are more than 10,000 black-owned private sector businesses in London. Black businesses no longer simply specialise in a few industries, serving niche markets, but cover many mainstream market sectors. Their combined annual turnover exceeds £4.5 billion, and they provide over 70,000 jobs to London's economy.

However, there are unique challenges facing black businesses such getting access to finance, both private and public, finding suitable and affordable business premises, and finding the right kind of business support.


This is why I was delighted to be contacted by Dr Victor Thompson editor of the Knowledge Fountain: http://www.knowledgefountain.co.uk/index.htm, the UK's largest and fastest growing black business magazine for an interview, due for publication next month.

The current issue is availible for free and back issues are availible for purchase on their website. Do take the time out to have a look an the amazing heights that ethnic owned businesses are reaching in the UK .

Virgin Unite




Dr Da Vinci has just received a lovely email from Christie Constantine at Virgin
Unite. It read:


What inspiring work you are doing.

We would love to feature your organisation in our newsletter. Are you
happy for us to do so and if so can you please provide us with a caption
for the photo below so we know who is who.

Many thanks and kind regards,

Christie




Virgin Unite (VU) is the non-profit foundation of the Virgin Group. It believes that business can be a force for good and because Sir Richard picks up all their overhead costs, they can ensure 100% of all donations go to the front line, where it matters most.


Dr Da Vinci has been a member of virgin unite for over a year and enjoys the fact that like the Flying Doctors, the group believes in the use of market mechanisms to achieve social good.

VU has already identified the problems associated with providing fast, cost effective healthcare within Africa in it's support of the life-saving Heaven's Angels initiative in sub-saharan Africa. Read more about this here: http://www.virginunite.com/News/Getting-healthcare-moving-in-rural-Africa/?nid=e3cebc02-558b-4264-a645-24dc8ca8d890&cid=b2cc3b54-5e68-49a0-b662-9611ee4ef7d5

Dr Da Vinci and the FD team are looking forward to working further with the VU team both on the Flying Doctors Nigeria project and other projects that look into sustainable ways to provide good quality, timely, cost-effective care in developing countries.

Our feature will be published and on the blog shortly.

Thanks again to Christie and the VU team. Keep up the incredible work!!


If you would like to get involved with virgin unite (I know a lot of doctors read this blog!) have a look at their website for more info it's:

http://www.virginunite.com/Default.aspx?nid=e3cebc02-558b-4264-a645-24dc8ca8d890

Dr Da Vinci Wishes Good Luck.....well Good Luck



Since the president Yar'Adua has been MIA for the past four months ago the has been something of a power vacuum in the lofty heights of Aso rock. I'm glad someone has stepped into fill it.

I've tried in vain find more information of Mr Goodluck Jonathan, but all my research tells me that he seems to be quite an elusive character who seems to have secured many of his prominent roles in government by being at the right place at the right time actually never having been elected to major public office in his own right.

But one of my mantra's is that LUCK=PREPARATION + OPPORTUNITY and I believe the harder you work the luckier you get.

Ever the optimist, I have high hopes for this southern, educated gentleman who holds a PHD from the University of Port Harcourt.

This is a golden opportunity to address the some issues: corruption, crime, health care, human rights, that have been somewhat neglected in the presidents absence.

Good luck, good luck and godspeed.

Dr Da Vinci

Monday, 8 February 2010

Remedy Campaign Employment For UK Doctors








“Congratulations, we want to make you an offer”.


“Great. Where will I be working?”

“We can’t tell you”.

“What will I be doing?”

“We can’t tell you”.

“It’s a definite contract of employment, isn’t it?”

“We can’t confirm that”.

“Well I’m waiting to hear from someone else, can I let you know later?”

“You have 48 hours to accept or reject this opportunity”.

“Can I change my mind when I find out what you’re offering me?”

“No. The GMC might not like that”.

“But what about my rights?”

“Rights??? You should consider yourself lucky to have got this far.”



It's great to see Remedy once again standing up for the rights of UK trainee doctors.
Dr Da Vinci wishes you all the best and continues to pay her subscription.

If any UK docs are reading this I urge you to join remedy ,they are doing fantastic things and are the only group truly standing up for UK doctors.

Thanks again guys
!

Wednesday, 3 February 2010

Interview With PRIDE Magazine

Doctor Da Vinci has been contacted by the largest black magazine in the UK. The interview has just been completed and I've posted the transcript here, enjoy!

Age: 23

Occupation
: Doctor/ Author/Entrepreneur/Trainee Pilot

Salary
: Only my accountant knows that and he’s getting his chest waxed right now so unavailable for comment


Tell me about growing up in England and family background?


I have a white mum! I grew up in a small town on the East coast called Lowestoft (although I was born in London) with my foster parents and about six other children.
I had a wonderful childhood, even though my foster parents working class and money was sometimes tight, we had a beach holiday every year and smart clothes to wear to school.
Neither of my foster parents went to university, but they gave me time, love and an encyclopaedia to look up all the answers to my many questions. A winning formula, if any.
Funnily enough, I never questioned why I had to walk half a mile to school every day, while most children got dropped off in cars or why I never had all the fashionable clothing and gadgets they seemed to.

What were your early ambitions and why? What were you passionate about?


My sister suffered from an inherited disease called sickle cell anaemia. I became fixated on the idea of finding a cure because I saw her suffer a lot with the pain.

We spent a lot of times in hospitals and around doctors and nurses which led me to develop an immense amount of respect for healthcare professionals.

I wanted to be a doctor for as long as I can remember.

I also loved the arts. I listened to a lot of my parents old music on our record player and was an avid reader. Some of my happiest childhood memories are when I was sat in our garden in the sun, reading Enid Blyton, Ronald Dahl or Beatrix Potter.


Tell me about becoming the youngest medical doctor in the whole of England. How did you feel?

I progressed through the academic system so quickly, but I believe intelligence, particularly as it is traditionally defined, does not sufficiently encompass the wide variety of abilities humans display.

I have a great amount of respect for individuals who show gifts in the other intelligences: the artists, architects, musicians, naturalists, designers, dancers, therapists, entrepreneurs, and others who enrich the world in which we live. But remain thankful that I was able to excel in one form of intelligence. A form which perhaps, considering my background, is something of a rarity.

Everyone I meet comments on how young I am, especially since I took a gap year. But when it comes to being successful, I know it’s clichéd, but age is really just a number.
It was the age of 52; Ray Kroc began a new age in franchising when partnered with the McDonald brothers to expand their burger and milkshake business. That is how the little restaurants with the bright yellow arches began.

It’s never to late to become what you might have been


-George Eliot



Tell me what/who inspired you to return to Nigeria and set up Flying Doctors?


I couldn’t agree more with Oscar Wilde when he says,
It often happens that the real tragedies of life occur in such an inartistic manner that they hurt us by their crude violence, their absolute incoherence, their absurd want of meaning, their entire lack of style.


I refer to the death of my 12 year old sister due to the absence of critical care facilities in Nigeria.

It was a horrible way to find out that the nearest air ambulance service was in South Africa, over eight hours away. That the mortality for head injuries in states outside Lagos and Abuja was 100% because there are hardly any neurosurgeons working outside those areas. And that the first time an air ambulance in Nigeria was proposed was in 1960 by the British, then again in the 1980’s, but no one had taken this idea forward. My sister was one of the thousands of sisters, brothers, mothers and grand-parents that died ever day because they couldn’t get to the hospital quick enough.

This was a rude awakening which I took as a personal call to action.

Finally, I read then amazing story of my friends in Mumbai at the 1298 ambulance, who left their jobs in London to start a land ambulance in Mumbai. They have supported me through a lot of the process.


Why was this important to you? What sacrifices did you make?


I felt it was my way of honouring my sister’s memory. She was an extraordinary young girl, full of life and she cared so much about everyone around her. I loved her more than words can express.

At the forefront, on my mind was the theme of one of the CMF (Christian Medical Fellowship conferences) I attended. ‘Live Simply, So Others May Simply Live’

So I did just that.

I saved most of my monthly income after putting my rent and food money aside and worked extra shifts most weekends. I spent money on managerial and medical courses as well as attending various networking meetings in my spare time.

I spent hours in the public library introducing myself to the world of business. I found out about people such as Steve Jobs and Richard Branson who excelled in the world of business and studied every aspect of their lives.

After a year of courses, extra shifts, intense study of finance, promotion, sales, management and leadership.

I brought my first ticket to Nigeria armed with my newly acquired knowledge, my business plan and my dream.


How did you go about this and put your plan into action?


I’ve realised that anything is possible with the right amount of nerve.

It took nerve to stand up in front of governors, company CEO’s and celebrities. I had never had to sell myself in the past. All of my tutors/bosses had heard of me long before I started to work in their departments. They had read my articles in the medical journals, heard about one of my audits or gotten an email from me regarding my role on the board for junior doctor’s education. They knew I was an excellent doctor and my CV spoke for itself.

In the world of business, I was a nobody. I had to speak for myself and sell myself in a completely new way. That took nerve.


It took nerve to step completely out of my comfort zone. From the British Medical Journal to the financial times, from my scrubs to my business suits, from being petrified of heights to flying a helicopter, from consenting to negotiating.

I t was hard work as I didn’t know anyone in Nigeria.

I spent hours sitting outside different offices, obtaining letters of introduction and tracking people down.

I am now a firm believer in the six degrees of separation, they certainly helped me!

What does your role entail? Describe your duties/responsibilities


I am the managing director of West Africa’s first air ambulance service, quoted as the ‘single most influential innovation in the Nigerian Healthcare sector this decade’.

My responsibilities include: providing managerial oversight for the company, expansion, recruitment, designing protocols, developing relationships, liaising with governments and I am also actively involved in the medical care offered.

I worked throughout University and my A-levels. I particularly enjoyed working in a Spa/Hair Salon. I maintained this interest throughout medical school, studying various forms of massage and in-depth dermatology modules with some of the most respected dermatologists in the country.
I presently maintain a specialist interest in aesthetic medicine, certified by the American Academy Of Aesthetic Medicine; working and consulting for various spas/medispa across the world.
I concentrate particularly on burn management and am actively involved in stem cell research looking at the role induced pluripotent stem cells can play in burn healing in children.
What do you most enjoy about your role?
I enjoy the daily challenges I face and the fact that no day is the same. I love acquiring new skills and having the opportunity to meet so many difference people from such diverse walks of life.
I love American history and look up to people like Barack Obama, Martin Luther King, Rosa Parks, Malcom X and Andy Warhol. People who have changed the course of history, through their beliefs, politics or art.
In like manner, I am thankful for the opportunity to be revolutionary in my own way, doing what I am passionate about- Gold Standard Health Care For All!

How has Flying Doctors changed your life?


It’s drastically changed my life. It was a difficult decision to leave my comfortable, above-average salary, my stipulated training, my friends, both sets of parents and move to a country that I barely knew anything about, to start something that no one thought was possible.


But, I haven’t regretted my decision for a moment. I hope my story inspires more young people to realise their potential, to see what is possible rather than what is not, and to take the plunge and follow their dreams.


What is your long-term, career vision?

I want to revolutionise healthcare in Africa as a doctor, an entrepreneur and an innovator.
I envisage myself working with a great number of non-profit organisations over the next few years.
I also see myself with an Angelina Jolie -esq brood of adopted children, wishing my husband looked like Brad Pitt.

Give 5 tips for success?


As capitalism continues to boom, I feel that many people assume that success is directly proportional to how much money you make. However, I have learned that the true definition of success is about the different innovative ways you manage to influence people’s lives for the better. I’ve already given away most of my tips during the course of this interview, but here’s a synopsis.

1) You need nerve! Step out of your comfort zone; if you are not feeling uncomfortable, then you are not trying hard enough.

2) Be passionate. About something......anything. Passion is the source of our finest moments. Passion drives us to succeed.

3) Be lucky. Remember Luck= preparation + opportunity. Make sure that you have done your background research, through reading, attending conferences and speaking to your mentors ,so you are prepared to recognise and take advantage of opportunities when they present themselves.

4) Work hard. If there’s anything I have learned there is no substitute for hard work. Every single person in the world has the innate ability to excel at one thing. Some have the ability to excel at many things. But in my opinion, it takes true diligence to make the most of one’s ability...........I sound like I’m on Heroes, lol

5) Live, love and be loved. I’ve always had an amazing set of friends and family around me. Their lives motivate me and challenge me for the better. Thanks guys for reminding me to take time out to relax.....also very important. You inspire me and I continue to look up to you.


Describe a typical day in your week. Please fill in the time slots or alter where necessary.

There is no such thing as a typical day for me. I’ll do yesterday.


6am: Flight into Tokyo from Singapore after attending a meeting of the American Academy Of Aesthetic Doctors as well as various business meetings with experts with a view to developing the emergency services in Ondo State.

7am-9am: En route to research hospital, vigorously checking emails on the bus and discussing with staff in Nigeria about the coming week.


9am-11am Arrive in research lab in Tokyo, thank my lab assistant for kindly taking care of my growing stem cells for me.

I subculture my cells and change the growth medium of some of my others.

Then my phone rings. It’s an American journalist wanting to schedule an interview with me before I go off back to Nigeria at a Medicine and Art exhibition that I’ll be speaking at, cells in hand I flick through my diary and give him a date.

Phone rings again, it’s my PA phoning about an email from one of my old bosses in Birmingham. He wants a copy of a clinical paper I wrote on HIV......since the tragic death of my one and only external hard drive (RIP) under a high speed train in Prague, these requests have become increasingly difficult to deal with. I tell him , I’ll get back to him.

Lunch: Business lunch with the Nigerian ambassador to Japan telling him all about our progress so far and looking at ways we can work together.
I’m freezing as I leave the restaurant as I left my coat in Singapore, the hotel say they’ll post it to me, hopefully I’ll get it before I leave to Nigeria, especially since I have the keys to my flat in Nigeria in the pocket of that coat!

2pm-4pm: Back to the lab, brief trip to the animal room
More looking at cell, reading papers, answering emails.
I note I’m supposed to be speaking to Tim Campbell (Apprentice Winner) tomorrow. Singaporean phone: check, Japanese phone : Check. Nigerian phone: Check. But where is my UK phone? But he’s calling me on my UK phone!

4pm-6pm: I join the professor’s ward round on the intensive care unit. I since my first trip to Japan nearly five years ago. There are some students from the UK on the round, I translate the various presentations from Japanese to English, briefly explaining what’s going on.

6pm: Back to the lab, I clean up my work desk, write up my experiments, steal some Pringles from the staff room due for dinner with investor at 8pm

8pm: Meet lovely Nigerian-Japanese gentleman, who is a senior executive at his company and one of my finest mentors. Our conversation carries on till about 11pm, the waiter complements us both on our excellent Japanese.
‘mada, mada chotto’(it’s not all that) I reply, bowing in the typical, modest Japanese manner.

1130pm: Home at last!

Flying Doctors On The BBC





After my BBC interview with Lesley Dolphin in January, I have been invited back onto the show as a sofa guest to discuss my work with the amazing Flying Doctors Team in more depth. Lesley is amazing and it's great to be invited back onto the show, I've been assured it's a comfy sofa!

3rdi Magazine Business Person Of The Month

Dr Da Vinci would just like to say a HUGE thank you to Karen Birch and the team at 3rdi Magazine for making her their business profile of the month.

The full articles is here:http://www.the3rdi.co.uk/

The 3rdi magazine is one of the UK's foremost publication's for women in the UK. It is interesting, witty and intelligent taking it's time to select stories and articles designed to encourage, support and inspire working women.

As women, the media should be telling us more than how to obtain 'false look' lashes, the latest celebrity divorce proceeding's or 'how to make your nose look smaller'.

Karen has taken the initiative to show the world that women are so much more than just that, by month-on-month continuing to show case women that are running their own businesses, achieving academic accolades and generally taking a stand against the images that the mainstream media creates.

This is not to say that the 3rdi magazine doesn't feature lovely ladies with note-worthy style such as the 'well-heeled diva' and the very glamourous Sonia Brown of the National Black Womens Network, but Karen highlights the fact that that is not, by a long shot, all these ladies have to offer!


Thanks again Karen for all your amazing work.