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September 16, 2005|Volume 34, Number 3


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Dikembe Mutombo



NBA star to discuss his humanitarian
efforts in the Congo

NBA All-Star Dikembe Mutombo of the Houston Rockets will visit Yale on Wednesday, Sept. 21, to meet with faculty and students, tour medical facilities and deliver a keynote address.

Anup Patel, a second-year Yale medical student, invited the 7-foot-2-inch center, not for his fame on the basketball court, but for his humanitarian efforts in his homeland, the Democratic Republic of Congo (formerly Zaire).

Mutombo, who recently completed his 13th season in the NBA, created the Dikembe Mutombo Foundation in 1997 to improve the health, education and quality of life of people in the Congo. One of the foundation's major projects is the construction of a new 300-bed general hospital in the capital city of Kinshasa, a facility which is set to open in June 2006.

The eight-time All-Star and four-time defensive player of the year contributed $10 million of his own money to the hospital project, the Congo's first new medical facility in 40 years.

During his tour of Yale medical facilities, Mutombo will meet with students from Hill Regional Career High School who take classes at the anatomy lab in the Anlyan Center, the School of Medicine's state-of-the-art facility. He will also meet with Yale basketball players before delivering the keynote address titled "From Kinshasa to the NBA and Back: A Giant Gift To Reform Africa's Health" at 4:30 p.m. in Battell Chapel, corner of College and Elm streets. The talk is free and open to the public.

Patel decided to contact the Dikembe Mutombo Foundation after attending a New York Knicks game where former Knicks assistant coach Brendan Suhr told him about Mutombo's humanitarian efforts. Patel contacted the foundation to express Yale's interest in Mutombo's activities and explore ways to help.

As an undergraduate at the University of Florida, Patel and his friend Rina Patel co-founded a charity called Cents of Relief. Along with other members, including NFL Pittsburgh Steeler Max Starks, they generate funds through activities such as the Cents of Relief Golf Tournament. Money raised by the organization has paid for medical supplies for women in prostitution, and sent children infected with HIV/AIDS to boarding school and covered their monthly check-ups by local physicians.

Mutombo's work is well known in the NBA and beyond. In 2000, he received the President's Service Award, the highest honor given by the White House for volunteer service.

He does all this, he says, because in the Congo, the average life expectancy is 45 years, and nearly one in five children die before their fifth birthday. A 1997 World Health Organization study found that access to health care is a major problem in the Congo. Diseases such as measles and polio, which have long been eradicated from most developed countries, are still widespread in the Congo, and malaria is the number-one killer there.

Named after Mutombo's late mother, the Biamba Marie Mutombo hospital will provide special care to Kinshasa's poorest residents and train its health professionals with the latest innovations in health care.

Physicians and nurses at the new hospital will treat all conditions, offering expertise in general medicine, urology, orthopedics, pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology. Specialized departments will offer services in surgery, obstetrical care, radiology and nuclear medicine. Researchers will have access to the hospital's laboratories for biochemistry, hematology, and bacterial and parasitic sampling.

Mutombo said, "If I was going to do something that will carry my legacy, I wanted to make sure it was very good, that it will stop the suffering, that will help the people that don't have a chance to go on a plane to go to South Africa or Europe to get treatment."


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Yale leaders contribute $70,000 to match employee and student donations

Student donates prize money to aid victims of hurricane

Panel examined why Katrina was 'a perfect storm' of failure

Brenzel named undergraduate admissions dean

Studies explore function and formation of feathers

Chinese president's visit postponed

ENDOWED PROFESSORSHIPS

NBA star to discuss his humanitarian efforts in the Congo

Director Sofia Coppola to give Chubb Lecture

Labor-management training aims to foster cooperation

Project explores how cultural outlook impacts opinions

MEDICAL SCHOOL NEWS

'Days of Caring'

Event celebrates 400-year anniversary of 'Don Quixote'

Symposium to examine history of U.S. reach into the Pacific

Scientist Pan invited to participate in NAE symposium

Electrical engineer T.P. Ma is honored for solid-state research

In weekly series, World Fellows will debate global topics

University will celebrate Constitution Day on Sept. 20

Multimedia artist presents photo exhibit and video installation at ISM

'A Taste of Bulgaria' to aid flood victims in another corner of the world

Urban infra-power and urban charisma to be explored in conference

Search committee named for School of Art dean

Biophysical chemist Julian Sturtevant . . .

Memorial service scheduled for . . . Robert Abelson

Alumni magazine now reaches every Yale graduate in the U.S.

Campus Notes


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