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Surgicorps

Surgicorps

Surgicorps International is a non-profit organization whose mission is to provide free surgical and medical care to people in need in developing countries.

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DeNese

Guatemala 2010, Katie Babin & Rita DeFrancesco

Written on November 5, 2010


Rita DeFrancesco and Katie Babin shared the same operating room (general surgery) this August in Guatemala, but how they came to be there – well, those are two different stories.

Rita was making her 13th trip, Katie her 1st.

Rita lives in Pittsburgh, close enough to visit the Surgicorps office and warehouse regularly. Katie lives in Michigan and found Surgicorps on an internet search.

But thrown together, they make an efficient and dedicated team.

Rita has worked with Surgicorps teams in Brazil, Paraguay, Nepal, Vietnam, Africa, Bhutan and Guatemala.
She has been awed by the beauty of the land in Nepal and the tranquility of the people and the country of Bhutan.

She has been impressed by the paradox of the poverty of the people and the richness of the land in Africa.
A veteran of so many trips, she finds it comforting to know, “I can still contribute in a meaningful way and survive the rigors of a Surgicorps trip.”

Indeed, she can.

“Divine intervention.” That’s how Katie describes her opportunity to join a Surgicorps mission. She had signed on, and was trying to figure out how to finance her trip, when she received an unsolicited check in the mail from her brother.

Divine intervention, indeed.

Of her co-workers in the operating room, Katie felt, “People were volunteering their time and efforts, and what made it so special was that we all wanted to be there – in another country for no money.”

“But I received something so much more valuable. I got to work with people who were generous and dedicated to serving others. I got to see people who were genuine when they said, “God will bless you.”

In Katie Babin’s words, “Thank you, Surgicorps International, for allowing me to join your family. I hope I will see you again soon.”

Katie and Rita, we at Surgicorps hope we see both of you again soon.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Guatemala, August 2010

Written on September 20, 2010

Child with DollMother and Child

In the words of volunteer Dave Fortun

It begins in chaos and ends in tears of joy for a job well done.

That is how a Surgicorps medical mission goes.

Sunday, screening day in Antigua, Guatemala, August, 2010.

51 Surgicorps volunteers screen, photograph, and register approximately 100 of the 150 surgical candidates for a week of surgeries. Language barriers, children coloring in busy walkways, crying babies and paperwork demands equal controlled mayhem.

But it all works out, and at the end of the day, 25 Guatemalans per day have been slotted for general, gynecological, hand, or plastic surgery.

Monday morning offers more of the same challenges, as the first patients (not necessarily the patients scheduled first!) are anesthetized, the next patients are prepped, and all 51 volunteers settle into their tasks, their routines, their roles.

And so it goes, Tuesday through Friday, and when it is all done, when 100+ patients from near and far have been sent upstairs or home, and the volunteers have packed, thanked and said goodbye to their hosts for the week, it is time to shed tears of joy for another job well done, for another successful mission.
 
As has been the case with the past 5 trips to Guatemala, the team was hosted by Obras Sociales Del Santo Hermano Pedro. Seven surgeons performed over 100 surgeries and the non-medical volunteers, besides supporting the medical personnel in the hospital, also made daily visits to the hospital orphanage to feed and play with the young children there.

The 100+ surgeries were performed by 7 specialists: Dr. Victor Nieto and Dr. Marguerite Bonaventura (General); Dr. David Kim (Hand); Dr. Joanne Oleck (Gyne); and Drs. Jack Demos, Mel Spira, and Anna Wooten (Plastics).

Surgicorps will return next August 13-20 as it continues its ongoing commitment to the staff and patients of Obras and the citizens of Guatemala. If you would like to join Surgicorps on any of the medical missions, please complete a volunteer application. Please support the Surgicorps mission to provide surgical care to those in need in developing countries by making a donation today on the donation page. Surgicorps needs your support.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Guatemala

Bhutan, April 2010

Written on May 24, 2010

The Kingdom of Bhutan: April 2010
In the words of Surgicorps Volunteer Lynda Dendtler

Arriving in Paro, Bhutan, from Pittsburgh, Tennessee, Virginia, Colorado and Spain, the 25 multidisciplinary Surgicorps volunteers were welcomed by 170 families eager to present themselves for surgeons Drs. Jack Demos, Sarah Pettrone and Marc Liang’s examination. Word had spread quickly in 2010 that Surgicorps was returning! With the assistance of Queen Ash’s Tarayana Foundation, families assembled from the far reaches of the kingdom in hopes of being accepted for surgical repair of a birth deformity or injury that would allow the child or adult to be able to eat or walk or use their hands and arms. And the Surgicorps team was equally eager to help as many as possible during the 2 weeks in country. Starting early in the morning and operating into the evening, some 89 surgeries provided improvement in the quality of life of these beautiful people.

During our fourth mission to this storybook kingdom, several children came for the next stage in procedures started one, two or even three years ago. Others returned to demonstrate their recovery and pride at being able to now extend and use an arm, hand or leg. One confident young boy was able to fully raise his arm above his head, no small feat for a child whose arm only last year was fused to his chest by scar tissue. His father was beaming as the boy showed his new “moves”. But the faces of the mothers whose babies and children’s cleft lips and palates repaired were the most joyful of all. After all, it fell to them to try to nourish their child since birth through badly misshapen lips that didn’t close, to keep their child from choking or starving. What could be more life changing?

Our team included doctors who made themselves available to the community at large. Upon hearing that a pediatrician was available, people lined up for Dr. Janet, who was able to confirm diagnoses or order further consultations, giving parents hope or confirmation. An anesthesiologist did not hesitate to help the staff during a crisis with a local baby in crisis. The monks of the famous Paro dzong streamed down the hillside for a “check –up” with Drs. Gino and Dr. Ron, who, in one case, solved the blurred vision of an elderly monk simply by giving up his own reading glasses!

The skills, compassion and dedication of each volunteer combined to gain the trust of a people who, though largely self reliant, hope for surgical intervention that is not yet widely available to all citizens of this kingdom. Every year children all over the world are born with a congenital lip and/or palate deformity (1 in 700). With the commitment of Surgicorps, many people of Bhutan need no longer face the social isolation, fear and health impairment that such a deformity can bring

Bhutan measures its citizens “Gross National Happiness”. One young mother shared details of her journey home following her son’s operation: 2 full days on a bus to the end of the line, then walking through the mountains from sunrise into the dark of night to her village, child wrapped in a shawl on her back. “But,” she said, “I am so happy…now he will be able to eat!” Surgicorps is pleased to be able to raise the measure of GNH in Bhutan in 2010!

Filed Under: Patient Stories

Ethiopia, February 2010

Written on April 9, 2010

In the words of Surgicorps Volunteer Melinda Handler:

Ethiopia was an exciting new destination for Surgicorps this February, 2010.

Dr Jack Demos and Dr Paul Kim once again performed operations on those who could not otherwise afford them. The two surgeons were assisted by a team of fourteen who accompanied them from the USA.

In order to be screened for possible care, many natives travelled from rural villages. Some walked up to two days just to reach a smaller city center. From there bus is standard transport, a ride that could last several days. The hospital was situated in the heart of Addis Ababa, the capital of Ethiopia. It is hard to imagine the fear or unease that must lie within oneself upon such a journey, the uncertainty of newly chartered territory. Still, hope must be ever present for the slight chance at change. They arrive tired and weary into our care. We are told many, due to their physical deformity, are rarely looked at, talked to or smiled upon within their community. Our smiles are wide and hugs are warm. It takes time for them to trust and to tell their story.

Twenty eight patients received fifty one procedures successfully over the course of five days. The majority of cases were cleft lips and cleft palates. We saw more adults than children, which meant these birth defects lasted well into their 20’s and 30’s (some suffered past that point.) In more developed countries, a defect such as a cleft palate is rectified at birth or soon after. Imagine, living through adulthood with a large open cavity at the roof of your mouth. The simple act of eating, (chewing and swallowing) is nearly impossible. The majority of food slips through the open gap, at times funneling through the nose. A surgery such as this can last between 2 to 4 hours, yet brings about significant change.

Every day a particular experience tugged at our hearts. There was the young, sweet 4 year old girl with a cleft lip. She had become a sort of mascot for the team, full of personality and energy. Her spirit was contagious. The surgery however, was canceled the morning of, due to testing positive for Malaria. Her family was obviously devastated by the news but the young girl still managed to smile and spread joy.

Another occasion involved two preteen girls who kept their facial deformities covered by wearing a wrap exposing only their dark eyes and long beautiful braids. On one particular morning the hospital staff discovered lice on both their scalps. A decision was made to shave their heads to prevent spreading within the ward. The girls were saddened by the thought of losing their feminine locks and how it would only add to the torture of an already visual affliction. Members of our team provided them with colorful silk scarves bought from the local market to help soften the blow.

On any Surgicorps mission a volunteer cannot help but be moved and affected by personal stories such as these.

By week’s end our goals were accomplished and all 28 patients were discharged and provided with follow up care. Once again they began their long journeys home, this time perhaps leaving with more confidence than before and with a better outlook for tomorrow.

In the words of Helen Keller- “Life is either a daring adventure or nothing. To keep our faces toward change and behave like free spirits in the presence of fate is strength undefeatable.”

Filed Under: Patient Stories

Vietnam, October 2009

Written on February 1, 2010

Filed Under: Patient Stories

Guatemala 2009

Written on September 28, 2009

4566-cropped5

A cleft palate is a cleft palate.

But the patients are always different.

They come from different towns with different stories and different faces. And that is why each trip to the same city, Antigua, is different – but just as rewarding as the last.

On August 15, 2009, a Surgicorps team of 47 volunteers (25 on their first mission) from Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Florida, Colorado, Utah, Boston, Connecticut and California met in Guatemala for a week-long mission of surgeries and related medical care. Same hospital, same host staff – different patients, different lives to be impacted.

Seven days and 86 surgeries later, the team returned to the United States, and Surgicorps International added 86 names to the list of thousands whose lives have been improved in Central and South America, Africa, and Asia over the past 15 years.

Doctors, nurses, medical students, non-medical volunteers, all working daily in some large or small role to achieve the same goal: an improved life for someone in need. All working daily to feel what one volunteer, 16-year old Aarthi Ramesh, felt after working with her mother, an anesthesiologist, and her father, a general surgeon: “This might have been the best day of my life.”

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: 2009, Add new tag, Guatemala

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