Brigade Update: Johns Hopkins

Led by Dr. Ed Zuroweste, Drs. Laurel Pellegrino, Lila Worden, Brett Wanamaker, three Johns Hopkins fourth-year residents, Dr. Mish Mizrahi, a family practice attending physician from UCLA, and Mike Piorunski, an Environmental and Occupational Health Program Associate with the Migrant Clinicians Network, the Johns Hopkins brigade spent two weeks immersed in the daily healthcare needs of the Santa Lucia area.
Accompanied by our nurses and Social Service doctors, they visited some of our most remote clinics and communities. While some students attended patients in our traditional field clinics, others assisted with the vaccinations. Dr. Pellegrino, who will begin her Psychiatry residency in July, had the opportunity to see patients in her field at the Santa Lucia clinic. Brigade members conducted home visits and gave charlas, or health education talks, to hypertensive, diabetic, and pregnant patients. Both the students’ and the audience’s favorite tool, by far, was a sugar-filled zip-lock bag demonstrating the actual amount of sugar in one bottle of Coke.
In their off-time, the brigade forded the Rio Torola, toured the La Esperanza hospital, and played a lot of Catchphrase. This group was open to experiencing everything from grunt work to taking night call and really went above and beyond in filling out our government paperwork. Thank you to Johns Hopkins and Dr. Zuroweste for your continued support, and for the brigade members’ tireless efforts on the ground in Intibucá.
For more photos from the brigade, check our Facebook page.

"Part of their world"

This is a song written by one of the Dayton brigade members:
To Disney’s “Part of Your World”
21 July 2012, Dayton Ohio HS Brigade
Look at our lives; aren’t they neat?
 
(But) Somehow or other they’re not quite complete
Looking around here you’d say,
Sure, we’ve got everything
 
We’ve got muy cool hair gel a-plenty
And high tech track sneakers galore
Cavity-free teeth? More than twenty!
But who cares? No big deal… we want more
 
We wanna go where the people know
Know how to smile when they’ve got next to nothing
Loving their fútbol played barefoot
On hard-scrabble ground
 
We need to share what we have in life
Crayons, papers, pencils, puzzles…
(with) kids who walk 5 miles to school each day
on uphill ground
 
This is our chance
Chance to give back
Some of the things that we have that they lack
 
It only makes sense, Dad
We’re just not that dense, Dad
We’re part of their world
 
What would it take to give them a break
Just next to nothing
When push comes to shove, we get more love
Than we could ever hope to be given
 
Yes we’re knowin’
 
That we’re growin’
We understand
 
We’re part of their world

VCU at Pinares from June 12 to 23, 2012

We had a successful two weeks. We had a large group of 35 people in total and we visited several communities around Pinares, held daily clinics in Pinares, did a CHI in each of the surrounding towns and also checked up on water filters and stoves, tested water quality of filters and then cleaned and replaced broken filter parts. We also had an overnight hike to Llano de Balas that about 15 people participated in. The translators from La Ceiba were great!
 

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Med students counted cavities and applied varnish to all kids in each town

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Water filter team taking a break