Tweeting From the Operating Room

By Tara Parker-Pope
July 9, 2009, 2:48 pm

When a loved one undergoes surgery, family members often pace the 
waiting room or nervously await a phone call, hoping for updates from 
hospital staff. This week, a Missouri children's hospital used 
Twitter to update family members near and far about a child's surgery.

On Tuesday, surgeons at Children's Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, 
Mo., operated on 10-year-old Anand Erdenebulgan of Ulaanbaatar, 
Mongolia, who suffered severe neck burns in a fireworks accident six 
months ago. The burns had caused his skin to contract, and surgery 
was needed to place skin expanders so the neck tissue could continue 
to grow, giving the boy a normal range of motion. He was accompanied 
on the trip by his mother and younger sister, but the child's father 
and other family members had to stay in Mongolia. The surgery was 
performed in mid-afternoon in Kansas City, which was around 4 a.m. 
Mongolia time.

While the hospital's chief of plastic surgery, Dr. Viirender Singhal, 
operated, the public information officer, Sherry D. Gibbs, posted 
live updates on Twitter from the operating room. The "tweets" were 
visible to anyone following the hospitals Twitter feed, and the 
family gave permission for all the updates to be made public. Here 
are some of the tweets sent from the operating room:

...

http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/09/tweeting-from-the-operating-room/

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