Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
By Tricia Watkinson
20 June, 2019
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
By Tricia Watkinson
20 June, 2019
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
By Tricia Watkinson
20 June, 2019
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
By Tricia Watkinson
20 June, 2019
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
By Tricia Watkinson
20 June, 2019
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
By Tricia Watkinson
20 June, 2019
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
By Tricia Watkinson
20 June, 2019
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
By Tricia Watkinson
20 June, 2019
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
By Tricia Watkinson
20 June, 2019
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
By Tricia Watkinson
20 June, 2019
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
By Tricia Watkinson
20 June, 2019
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
Burns Patient Glenn Ogg
By Tricia Watkinson
20 June, 2019
Burra burns victim Glenn Ogg owes his renewed life to a world-first skin transplant developed at the Royal Adelaide Hospital by surgeon John Greenwood, who got sick of seeing burns patients with limited options.
Mr Ogg, 33, survived burns to 95 per cent of his body, and became the first to benefit from the new technique.
Dr Greenwood, who was a key surgeon treating the Bali bombing victims in 2002 and SA Australian of the Year in 2016, has developed a skin farm at the Royal Adelaide – otherwise known as the composite cultured skin (CCS) technology – in the skin engineering laboratory. 


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