Professor Jean O’Sullivan is a Consultant in Emergency Medicine at Tallaght University
Hospital, in Dublin, Clinical Professor of Emergency Medicine at Trinity College Dublin, and
Chair of the Board and Founder of Global Emergency Care Skills (a.k.a. GECS),
a voluntary, non-profit charity organisation which she founded in 2008, and which provides
high quality emergency care training to healthcare professionals in Africa. To date, GECS has
provided training courses for over 600 doctors, nurses and clinical officers in six African
countries, where sepsis and trauma are the leading causes of death.
GECS training is provided through simulation-based courses in trauma care, resuscitation
skills and major incident management. All of the instructors are volunteers, who pay for their
own travel, and fund-raise for the organisation, and they’ve included paramedics from the
Dublin Fire Brigade, and many of the Ireland’s leading emergency physicians, like Drs Ger
O’Connor, Eoin Fogarty, Cian McDermott, and Rob Eager, as well as Jean herself.
Once the courses are completed, local trainers are empowered to continue the skills training
for other colleagues and to lead the regional development of emergency care, and both
teaching equipment and lifesaving medical equipment (like portable ultrasound machines) are
provided to their hospitals. GECS has partnered with the World Health Organisation, the
College of Surgeons of East, Central and Southern Africa, and the African Federation for
Emergency Medicine.
In 2021, GECS was the winner of the prestigious Royal College of Emergency Medicine
William Rutherford Humanitarian Award. And in June 2024, Professor O’Sullivan was
presented with the International Federation of Emergency Medicine Humanitarian Award in
Taiwan, for her ‘exemplary leadership ...(in the) development of safer emergency care in
areas of sub-Saharan Africa over the course of 16 years, through her vision, hard work and
the ability to inspire others’. It is no exaggeration to say that the announcement of the latter
award, in particular, was received with undiluted pride by the whole of the Irish emergency
medicine community.
In this podcast episode, Jean reflects on the origins of her humanitarian work and her growing
involvement in global online medical education with the United Nations, as well as the major
activities ‘at home’ with which she has been associated, from a ‘whistleblowing’ saga to her
role with the Injuries Resolution Board, as well as her therapeutic pastime of painting.
And in the process, the listener will hear how she left the podcast host very red-faced, indeed!
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