Health & Fitness

Eye Hospital Jet Restocks In Oakland

It is headed for Vietnam. This plane has been used to train about 10,000 doctors and perform 350,000 eye surgeries over the last 5 years.

 The operating room on the Flying Eye Hospital, a remodeled  airplane
The operating room on the Flying Eye Hospital, a remodeled airplane (Bay City News/Janis Mara)

OAKLAND, CA — Ophthalmologist Omar Salamanca bent over his work, demonstrating a detail of eye surgery for colleagues as they stood inside a Boeing MD-10 airplane Saturday at Oakland International Airport.

Salamanca is a staff eye doctor at the Flying Eye Hospital, a converted airplane that has been used to train about 10,000 doctors, administer 12.5 million eye exams and perform 350,000 eye surgeries in developing countries around the world over the last five years.

The airplane was repurposed as a classroom and hospital complete with operating room by New York-based Orbis International, a nonprofit that fights avoidable blindness.

Find out what's happening in Alamedafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

"The main purpose of our mission is to show doctors different ways to do surgery to improve their skills," Salamanca said. While surgeries are regularly performed in the operating room on the plane, Salamanca was demonstrating the surgery on a dummy head.

Ophthalmologist Omar Salamanca demonstrates operating technique Saturday, August 3 to colleagues aboard the Flying Eye Hospital, a remodeled airplane operated by New York-based Orbis International, a nonprofit that fights avoidable blindness in developing countries all over the world. Soon Salamanca will fly to Vietnam to train local doctors in eye surgery.(Bay City News/Janis Mara)

"We are leaving Aug. 13 for Hue, Vietnam, where we will work with around 30 local doctors," Salamanca said. While he is employed by Orbis, the nonprofit has hundreds of volunteer doctors as well.

Find out what's happening in Alamedafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The Flying Eye Hospital was parked free Saturday at a hangar courtesy of the Oakland airport in order to stock up on eye drops, bandages, gloves and other items before leaving for Vietnam.

"We have treated patients in parts of Africa, India, China, Bolivia and Peru," said spokeswoman Louise Harris.

Head Nurse Angela Purcell is pictured Saturday, August 3 in the recovery room aboard the Flying Eye Hospital, a remodeled airplane operated by New York-based Orbis International, a nonprofit that fights avoidable blindness in developing countries all over the world. (Bay City News/Janis Mara)

Generally, the doctors do four or five cases a day working with local patients during a visit as teaching demonstrations, she said.

When the doctors perform surgery on the plane, their observers aren't in the operating room. The surgery is projected on a large screen in a 46-seat training room on the airplane.

Orbis International's flying hospitals got started in 1982. The MD-10 is the third plane the nonprofit has used. It was donated by FedEx, and it is piloted by volunteer pilots who work at FedEx.

"I've been doing this for 19 years and I wouldn't give it up for anything," said Capt. Gary Dyson, one of the FedEx volunteer pilots.

"When you see a little child get their vision back, it grabs you by the heart," Dyson said.

— Janis Mara, Bay City News

Also See: