Monday, July 18, 2011

Day One in Arequipa

Photo: My "office" in Arequipa the first day

After a full day in Lima - sightseeing, visiting the Indian Market and touring our partner NGOs (OPRECE) facilities - we finally arrived in Arequipa late on Saturday night.

Sunday was a planned day of rest. Our team had the option of sightseeing in the beautiful "White City" or simply resting in their rooms. I, on the other hand, was forced into rest with a 24-hour illness that has kept me in bed until Monday morning. Alas, it is better to be sick on the rest day, than to be incapacitated during the activities portion of the team's week in Arequipa.

Today, we head up to the Mission of Alto Cayma. This morning will be an orientation and a time to discuss the difference between week one and week two of the Team Peru trip. In addition, we will be putting the team to work this afternoon with a variety of activities - from painting at the volunteer house to working in the Mission's "brick and mortar" health clinic.

This is going to be a great week. Stay tuned for updates.

Saturday, July 16, 2011

On to Arequipa

Photo: The HBI Team's reception with the Mayor of Tinguina.

What a great day. We just finished our last day in Lima. A tour of the city, a visit to the Indian Market and a great afternoon team lunch.

This has been one long week. Our days have been non-stop from 6:30 a.m. until 11:30 p.m. The pace of the week has worn everyone out. We will be in for a whole new experience next week, when Father Alex challenges our team to focus on "being" and not just "doing."

At this point we have had team members head off to Cusco for tourism, back to the U.S. for re-integration, and down to Arequipa for continued outreach efforts. The time together has been fruitful and filled with learnings. Our goal is that all of the new HBI family members can take their new experiences back with them wherever they are.

Stay tuned to the HBI Blog for updates throughout this week. A special thanks to everyone for the support of HBI and the people of Peru.

Friday, July 15, 2011

A Complete Week

Photo: The HBI Team Peru 2011

"I think it was a really complete week of outreach," so were the words of HBI's Director of Operations as we drove north on the Pan American Highway to Lima following our last day of outreach in Ica. He is right. This has been a complete week. All and all, we have provided medical, dental, psychological, and optometric services to over 1,300 patients.

Our team members have taught at the local university (Alas Peruanas University)- where Dr. Al Turner provided physical therapy students instructions in manual medicine and osteopathic manipulative treatment (OMT). In addition, Dr. Bob Gehringer (HBI's Medical Director) taught neonatal resuscitation program (NRP) classes to over 70 nurses and physicians in Ica area Ministry of Health clinics. Working in partnership with two Peruvian non-governmental organizations (NGOs) we provided HIV testing to over 300 patients - testing 4 people positive for HIV and helping to link them into care. Finally, working in partnership with the Peruvian NGO OPRECE, over 800 people were screened for cataracts and another 65 patients were found to be suitable candidates for surgical removal of their cataracts during a free Clinton Foundation sponsored campaign during the week of July 25.

It truly was a complete first week of the 2011 Team Peru outreach campaign. I am really proud of all the work our team has done and the amazing organization and logistics coordination HBI's Director of Operations has undertaken to put this great outreach project together.

Preferential Services for the Poor

Photo: Dr. Bob taking pediatric patients in his exam "room."

It happens in almost ever clinic outreach. The extremely poor are almost always pushed to the back of the lines. I don’t think it is an overt distinction on anyone’s part – I just think people living in extreme poverty are not very good at self-advocacy.

This week was no exception. We started with the expressed goal of reaching the poorest communities in and around the city of Ica. Sometime on Wednesday afternoon, we realized that the poorest of the poor were not getting seen. So, yesterday afternoon, we dramatically reconfigured our outreach plan to target our services to the poorest community – the community that brought us to Ica in the first place – the small pueblo jovenes of Girasoles.

Having spent the first part of the week working in partnership with the mayor’s offices of La Molina and Tinguina, we “broke off” on our own and took all of our supplies and the entire team out to Girasols. This was not an easy feet. In the communities of La Molina and Tinguina, the Mayor’s had helped to secure municipal locations or schools for us to use for our outreach sites. In the community of Girasoles, there is no concrete pitch or even flat area for us to set up tents – there is only sand and rock.

Make do, however, we did. We set-up clinic locations in some very unique areas - taking advantage of the shade offered by the bus that transported us out to the community, renting a small tarp covered clearing (we gave the owner of the area 10 liters of water in payment) for pediatric care, filling the seat of an old school bus for our pharmacy and borrowing the shade of a thatched home for triage and registration. In a little over 3-hours, after some very last minute planning, we pulled together a clinic in one of the poorest areas in Peru and served over 200 people.

This week has been an exceptional success. We have provided medical, dental, ophthalmological and psychological services to over 1,200 people. We have worked in 5 different communities and partnered with well over 50 Peruvian volunteers. This has been an amazing week of service. Perhaps we are most proud for our continual emphasis on seeking ways to serve the most underserved.

As the sun went down and our team finished the last of the pharmacy prescriptions, we collected around the school bus to help pack our supplies and head back to the Union Biblica camp. Slowly, but steadily, the Girasoles community came up to our team to thank us for our services. Slowly, but steadily, we all began to realize how important our day had been. At the end of our day - we all realized how important it is to ensure that there is a need to ensure preferential services delivery for the poor.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Day 2 at the Team Peru Clinic

We are in Ica and to say the campaign is going great is an understatement! During day one of our clinic outreach we served well over 300 patients and in day two we served another 300+ patients!

I am amazed at how excited people are for our new adventure in Ica . . . and I am not talking about the North American volunteers. The Union Biblica house "father" at the Casa Girasoles has mounted a veritable army of volunteers (physicians, nurses, dentists, general helpers) to help with the campaign.

This "army," along with our 40 Peruvian and North American Team Peru volunteers, brings our total number of staff at a clinic site each day to over 65 people. We truly have a "village" working in some of the poorest areas of Ica to bring medical, dental and social services. Talk about an exciting year. This year, we have more Peruvian's involved in the campaign than "gringo" volunteers. Peruvians helping Peruvians - this is awesome!

Tomorrow night I hope to have an Internet connection fast enough to post some photos from our campaign. Suffice it to say, there have been an endless stream of smiling faces on the part of our volunteers and the people we are serving.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Day One in Lima

Well, we arrived in Lima very late last night (no . . . make that very early this morning) and we have already hit the ground running. After a day filled with meetings, gathering supplies and a late night dinner with a congresswoman - our team is ready for bed. Oh, but not so fast.

Tonight is the first night of the next three that involve an ongoing parade of volunteers arriving in Lima. Ben has already headed to the airport to pick-up three volunteers. I am up next at 4:30 a.m. to retrieve another volunteer. All in all, we have over 20 volunteers arriving on various flights over next next two days.

All of the airport runs culminate very late on Saturday night when we pick up the last volunteer a little after 1 a.m. and head down the Pan-American highway for a 5-hour drive to the city of Ica.

Need-less-to-say, it is going to be really important to get as much sleep as possible between now and when the campaign officially starts on Sunday. This is going to be a great week and I am certain I will have a number of wonderful stories to post on the Blog. Stay tuned.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Count Down to 2011

Things are coming down to the wire as we finalize our packing, make certain all of the trip participants have the information they need to spend over two weeks in Peru, and get set for our flights. This years trip promises to be different on a number of levels.

A couple of big differences include: (1) We have a new location for our first week of outreach with Union Biblica; (2) We are going to a new outreach settlement with Father Alex in Arequipa; (3) And, we are taking a really big group with us.

"All and all this going to be a very interesting month . . . that is for sure," as aptly stated by my wife (Lee) as she prepares to sit-out the first Team Peru trip in over 17-years.

One thing is certain to remain the same - the passion that our volunteers bring to serving in Peru. We will be updating the Blog frequently on the trip and hope to share some of our adventures and our learnings.

Thank you for your continue support of HBI. Stay tuned . . .