Posts Tagged ‘medical’

Aug 6 Wrapping up!

Friday, August 6th, 2010

On Friday afternoon we closed up shop at the clinic, but not before a packed day of assisting others and doing the Lord’s work. A five-year old boy with six toes on one foot needed an amputation so that he could wear shoes. One of our doctors, an orthopedic surgeon, was able to perform the amputation on-site. The procedure was very successful, and we had one happy little boy once the procedure was over!

Smiling now that the toe amputation procedure is over!

Prayer Update: We updated you previously about two young boys whom we transported to the hospital, one hour away, for further testing. Richardo, the 1-year old boy, was diagnosed with pneumonia and will receive further treatment so that he can heal.  We’re thankful that he is doing so well.  However, the other 10-year old boy, who had swollen lymph glands, had a worst-case diagnosis.  His blood work revealed that the 10-year old has leukemia. We left the family in the care of Panamanian doctors, and we will continue to pray for this child and his family.

A day in pictures: We had a wonderful final day on the reservation.  Here are a few photos from our final day.

Closing with the kids

Maria working with the children

Children at our Parasite Treatment Station.

A waiting line at our pharmacy station

Angie with her sporty new Ngobe dress!

Ngobe woman receives a new pair of glasses for the first time

After closing up shop on the reservation, we flew back to Panama City, where we had a great dinner together

Aug 8 Heading Home

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

Departing Panama: Around 7:30am on Sunday morning, our plane departs from Panama City to Atlanta (which means we must leave the hotel around 4:30am). Please keep our travels in your prayers.

Update on Samuel: Several days ago, we asked you to pray for an infant named Samuel and his mother, Anita. Samuel arrived at our clinic in serious condition, and we rushed him to the hospital, where he was diagnosed with meningitis. This morning, Samuel passed away. The pastor of the church is purchasing a small casket for Samuel. We are sad at the loss of such a precious child, and we pray that God will comfort Anita in her loss.

Anita and Samuel

Anita and Samuel

Signing-Off:This is our last blog posting from Panama.  We will post another blog early next week. It has been a fantastic trip for everyone, and a life-changing trip for several. Some young people have considered engaging in more extended mission experiences in the future. It has been my pleasure to update this blog throughout the week. Thank you for following our work and for praying for us. I’ll leave you with a few pictures of the Ngobe, a people loved by God, to remind us of the reason that we came. Blessings!  Mikea ngobe scenea ngobe woman

a ngobe mother and child

Aug 7 Closing Up Shop

Friday, August 7th, 2009

View Mission Trip Photos: We just opened a Flickr account in order to share our group photos online. Over the next couple of weeks, all mission team members will be able to upload and share photos from the trip. To view photos (from the first two days of the trip so far), go to www.flickr.com   Search for the group “Panama Mission 2009″ and you can view the photos.

Goodbye from the Church: The Methodist Church in David thanked our mission team for its work in Panama. As a thank-you, the church’s youth group performed traditional Panamanian dance…and several of our group members joined in!

Donna got her groove on!

Donna got her groove on!

Bill couldn't just sit there

Bill couldn't just sit there

Dr. Dauphin, with one of the dancers

Dr. Dauphin, with one of the dancers

Team Photos: Our entire team is composed of 34 people from six churches! (Covenant UMC, Dothan First UMC, Enterprise First UMC, Perry Hill UMC in Montgomery, Shiloh Baptist Church in Heartland, and Mt. Carmel UMC in Echo) Amazingly, our whole group bonded very quickly. The trip included various projects, including medical clinic, dental clinic, Vacation Bible School, Photo Station, Eye Glasses Station, and Construction Crew. Below are a few photos of the groups that contributed to our work.

Those who helped in the medical team

Those who helped in the medical team

Those who helped in the construction crew

Those who helped in the construction crew

Three pastors helped throughout the week: Sterling Boykin (Dothan First UMC), Mike Hoppe (Covenant UMC) Pastor Bonita (Methodist Church in David)

Three pastors helped throughout the week: Sterling Boykin (Dothan First UMC), Mike Hoppe (Covenant UMC), Pastor Bonita (Methodist Church in David)

Itinerary: On Saturday, August 8, the team gets the chance to see the sights of Panama City. Some of the sights include, the canal (of course!), colonial Panama, old Panama, and shopping in the open market. We will fly from Panama City to Atlanta early on Sunday morning.

One of our team members, Joan Collins (see the blog “Meet the Missionaries: Part 1″), is helping us to to understand Panamanian life and culture. She lived in Panama City and was actually married in a church here!

We all look forward to seeing our loved-ones again!  (I love you Reed! See you soon! Mike)

Aug 6 Winding Down

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

Today was a successful day on the mission site. Because we were rained-out yesterday, we had a steady flow of patients all day long. Here are a few photographs to record some of the activities of the day!

Steve painting

Steve painting

Ngobe hanging out around the clinic

Ngobe hanging out around the clinic

Ngobe children chasing us as we leave the clinic

Ngobe children chasing us as we leave the clinic

Larry working on the construction crew. They completed digging of the holes for the foundation of the new addition

Larry working on the construction crew. They completed digging of the holes for the foundation of the new addition

Catholic Social Services provided a mobile dental clinic today so that we could have the equipment to do fillings

Catholic Social Services provided a mobile dental clinic today so that we could have the equipment to do fillings

Serving a Ngobe person inside the mobile dental clinic

Serving a Ngobe person inside the mobile dental clinic

Dilemma of Crossing the River: On one side of a nearby river is the reservation on which many of the Ngobe live. Just on the other side of the river is our clinic and the elementary school. Many of the Ngobe who attend our clinic, or school, must cross the river. During the rainy season (which is just starting), the river can swell and become dangerous to cross. We saw many women wading across the river, holding their infant children over their heads!

The Rotary Club in Dothan is attempting to generate enough funds ($20,000) to create a footbridge so that the Ngobe will have a safe means by which to cross the river in this location. As a temporary relief, a cable line was placed across the river to help people to cross.

Cable and cage over the river

Cable and cage over the river

Update on Samuel: We have been praying for baby Samuel, who was diagnosed with meningitis. His condition remains the same, very critical. The hospital gave his mother, Anita, meal tickets and a place to stay while she stays at the hospital far away from home. Because Samuel is in very critical condition, Anita is permitted to see Samuel only occassionally, but we keep praying for them!

Upcoming Itinerary:Tomorrow (Friday), we will work with the Ngobe until lunch, have our final farewell ceremony, and then come back to the hotel to get cleaned-up. We will fly back to Panama City on Friday night, and on Saturday, we will spend the day seeing the sights (including the canal!). On Sunday morning, we will fly back to the U.S. We will do our best to keep the blog updated in the coming days.


Meet Our Missionaries: Part 3

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

Jack” Jackson (54): Jack is joining in the yearly mission to Panama for the fifth time. He comes to Panama, year

Jack Jackson serves in the medical clinic

Jack Jackson serves in the medical clinic

after year, out of his sense of God’s calling upon his life. He says, “I can’t preach, and I’ve never been much of a teacher, but I know medicine, and I want to come and apply it.” As a gastroenterologist, Jack believes that his talents can be used to serve others, whether applying his specialization in the Dothan area or taking his trade to a remote part of Panama.

Jack’s family shares his love of mission, and his wife and children have also participated in other trips to Africa and Venezuela. After working for several years in Panama, Jack has developed a passion for addressing the poverty and cares to address systemic problems that have plagued the Ngobe people. He acknowledges that, while there are many needs in Alabama that Christians must address, he notes that the needs among the Ngobe in Panama far outweigh what we might normally see in Alabama. “God calls us to go,” and address these problems, he says. Jack, a member of Covenant UMC, encourages others who have not experienced an international mission trip to give it a try, and a mission to Panama would be a good first trip as the culture and conveniences the mission team experiences are relatively close to the American standard.

Cara Blondheim (19): Cara is joining the mission to Panama for the first time, and this is the first time that she has

Cara Blandheim is a nurse in the medical clinic

Cara Blondheim is a nurse in the medical clinic

traveled outside of the United States. Cara is a nursing student at Troy University, and she is using her nursing skills to assist doctors in the clinic throughout the week.

Cara came to Panama as the result of an answered prayer. She shared that God had started placing the idea of missions on her heart. Then, she recalled, “I was praying one time and God said, ‘Go.’” Shortly after her prayer, she heard about the mission to Panama and she knew that she was supposed to go. Cara was nervous about traveling outside of the country for the first time, but after serving for several days, the trip is going better than she expected. She shared that she has been touched by working with the Ngobe children and the fact that all of those being helped seem so appreciative. She hopes to participate in many more mission trips in the future and, perhaps, she hopes to create a mission trip among members of her home church, Carmel UMC in Echo, AL.

Billy Woods (62): Billy is joining the mission to Panama for the first time, though he has enjoyed serving in Brazil

Billy Woods serves on the Construction Crew

Billy Woods serves on the Construction Crew

several times in the past. Billy, a Safety Director and former Mayor of Headland, is compelled to serve as a result of his sense of God’s blessings on his life. He noted, “God has enriched us and blessed us, and God expects and demands us to go to others.” Yet, serving the Ngobe is not a great sacrifice for Billy as these wonderful people are “part of God’s great creation.”

Billy noted that some might critique the fact that missionaries travel so far when there are needs right in the Dothan area. “There is a lot of mission that can be done locally and state-wide for sure,” he said, “but the people here are now receiving things that they would never have an opportunity to receive.”

Billy has helped on this mission with any work that needs to be done, and he has spent much time helping to paint a guest house for visiting missionaries and other workers. “It’s tiring work but not exhausting. There is a great difference,” he said. It is tiring work that is very fulfilling.

Erica Fowler (25): Erica is joining the Panama mission for the first time, and this is the first time that she has traveled outside of the United States. The biggest sacrifice that Erica had to make is leaving behind her husband and

Erica Fowler is a nurse in the medical clinic

Erica Fowler is a nurse in the medical clinic

two young children. Yet, while leaving her family is difficult, Erica knew that she needed to come.

Since Erica was 14 years old, she believed that God was calling her into mission. She was inspired by missionaries who visited her church as a child. Through the years, “life” seemed to prevent her from getting involved personally in mission. Then, when she considered what career to pursue, she chose nursing because she knew that her skills could be used on the mission field. Therefore, she shared that coming to Panama is the fulfillment of a lifetime goal.

Working in the clinic has been a profound experience for Erica. With tears in her eyes, she said, “It’s changed my perspective as a Christian, but it has also changed my perspective as a mother. I am so thankful to be a mother, and the fact that these mothers can have health for their children is a great blessing.” She notes that other mothers may be hesitant to join in mission but, she said, “God will make a way” if a person is called by God. Erica, a member of Shiloh Baptist Church in Hartford, AL, hopes to participate in many more mission trips in the future.

Aug 4 Connecting to families

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

Baby Samuel: One patient from our medical clinic won our hearts today, and we ask that you join us in praying for an

Baby Samuel and his mother Anita

Baby Samuel and his mother Anita

infant named Samuel. Samuel’s mother, Anita, walked for one hour in order to find a car to hitch-hike a ride for an additional hour just to come to our clinic. Samuel looked very ill, and the doctors at our clinic had the suspicion that the baby might not live very long. We rushed Samuel to a hospital over 20 miles away, and they diagnosed him as having meningitis. At this point, his prospectus is very critical. So, please join us in praying, and we will keep you updated with how things develop.

Vacation Bible School: Over 60 children attended our Vacation Bible School today. Jan, the director of that ministry, was excited to share how responsive the kids have been to the crafts and games. Today, the children made little animal shapes out of pipe cleaners. Something as simple as this craft connected with the children, and parents were glad that the children could take the little crafts home with them. The local church leaders expressed their joy that our missionaries are working not only with important medical concerns, but we are also reaching families through the VBS, making photos to give to families, and helping locals with needed construction work.

We've nicknamed this cute kid "Boots"

We've nicknamed this cute kid "Boots"

Children proudly display their pipe cleaner animals

Children proudly display their pipe cleaner animals

A child happy to be at VBS

A child happy to be at VBS

Dental Clinic: Yesterday, the dental “clinic” was set up outside underneath a tree. Without electricity or water, Dr.

Using the Dental Room with a Ngobe patient

Using the Dental Room with a Ngobe patient

Dauphin was only able to extract decayed teeth. Today, we loaded up a busload of patients and drove them 5 miles to a public health clinic with a dental room so that we could fill cavities instead of only extracting teeth. It turned out, however, that much of the equipment in the dental room did not work properly, and most of the people were sent back home. Many patients, however, still received needed extractions.

Photo of the Day: During the day, several women prepare dinners of rice and beans for all of the patients who arrive for medical treatment. While working, one of the women put her small child to sleep in a nearby hammock.

Ngobe baby asleep in a hammock

Ngobe baby asleep in a hammock