Medical items bound for Ethiopia

Former KU students fostered plan for new hospital

? Plans for a new hospital in Independence will translate into medical help for people in Ethiopia.

Four floors of Independence Regional Health Center have been closed for months as the hospital prepares to move into a new, $225 million hospital in 2007. The equipment on those floors won’t go to the new hospital.

Instead it’s going to Ethiopia, and might spur construction of the first modern hospital in Addis Ababa, a city of nearly 5 million people.

Volunteers worked during the weekend to load $400,000 worth of tables, beds, shelves, IV towers and more into a trailer to be shipped overseas.

The equipment will literally be a lifesaver in Ethiopia, said James Everett, president of the Ethiopia Health Support Foundation. “To them, it’s trash. To us, it’s gold,” he said.

At first, the equipment will fill the ground floor of an already existing building in Addis Ababa. Eventually, Everett hopes, the value of the equipment will prompt city leaders to fund a new $7 million hospital to help an underserved community.

The equipment’s journey actually began 15 years ago, when two Kansas University students had dinner with Everett. The students, Akeza Teame and Sisay Shimelis, told Everett of life in Ethiopia and their dreams to take what they learned at Kansas back to their home country.

Two years later, Teame got in touch with Everett again. Now focused on getting a medical degree, he told Everett of his new goal to create a modern hospital in his native land.

Everett told Teame and Shimelis to draft a plan. They eventually presented the plan to officials in Ethiopia, the World Bank and elsewhere.

The plan was rejected, but city leaders in Addis Ababa eventually said if the group could collect $600,000 worth of medical equipment and supplies, the city would pay for the construction of the hospital.

Everett then began to search Kansas City for equipment.

When Independence Regional was taken over by HCA, the hospital was suddenly full of equipment ready to be replaced, said Matt Smithmier, a spokesman for the hospital.

Saturday was moving day, and friends of Everett, Teame and Shimelis loaded the cargo into the first of three trailers they’ll send to Ethiopia by boat.

The plans are to have the equipment running in the existing building later this year. And if all the equipment comes through, Everett said, he wants the new facility’s opening to coincide with the opening of the new Independence hospital, in the summer of 2007.