Hospital touts its new equipment
Published 12:00 am Sunday, February 18, 2001
Sunday, February 18, 2001
The Natchez Democrat
You might not know it, but Natchez is part of the &uot;stone
belt.&uot; The city is part of a region that has a higher incidence
of kidney stones, said Dr. James W. Langston, a urologist at Natchez
Community Hospital. One reason, he said, is that deydration is
more common in the South.
But Natchez Community a new piece of equipment that hospital
officials say will make it easier to treat kidney stones, a condition
Langston said is common among its patients.
&uot;If someone came into the emergency room now with kidney
stones, we could have them out in about three or four hours,&uot;
Langston said.
That’s opposed to the overnight stay patients often experienced
with the hospital’s previous technology, which was about 15 years
old.
The Holmium laser pulverizes kidney stones so that patients
can pass them. Because it is more precise, it lowers the risk
of damage to surrounding tissue. The laser is &uot;safer, more
efficient and involves less risk,&uot; said new Natchez Community
CEO David Ainsworth.
The new equipment, which cost about $63,000, is part of more
than $1 million in capital expenses at the hospital this year,
Ainsworth said.
Another new piece of equipment is an argon laser, used primarily
in gastroenterology.
&uot;All of this stuff makes the patient’s hospitalization
less, and the treatments more accurate and specific,&uot; Langston
said. &uot;It makes it easier for doctors to do their jobs.&uot;