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Sarah Fellers, one of the doctors on last fall’s service trip to Paraiso, wrote an article that was published in the American Academy of Family Physician’s International Update Newsletter.

The article is on page 4–check it out!

The June 2010 HOMBRE trip to the Dominican Republic came to an end almost two weeks ago, as the team arrived back home in the wee hours of June 13th.  It is always difficult when these trips end–spending so much time in such close quarters with dedicated and determined people leaves a deep impression and makes it hard as everyone goes their separate ways for the summer.

This trip was much more peaceful than last year’s: no attempted robberies, no threats of violence.  We stayed in a new hotel, found new places to each and to pass the time, and (hopefully) provided positive influences on the careers of 11 medical, pharmacy and pre-medical students.  The team was willing to try new ideas, and I think we have some good ideas for future projects in terms of medical supplies and medication purchases, and in terms of teaching students clinical skills in challenging conditions.  We had a Dominican doctor working with us for 4 days, and a colleague joined her for the second half of the project.  All told, we provided care to nearly 600 patients and dental fluoride treatments to nearly 300 children.

I’ll update the website with some additional photos, but I’m pasting the team’s photo below.  Thanks for all the hard work!

Our VCU School of Pharmacy student HOMBRE participants are posting on a blog during this trip: check out http://blog.vcu.edu/pharmacyhombre/ to see what their thoughts are.

Today we completed our first 4 days of clinical work with the HOMBRE team. We spent these days working in Villa Mella, our usual work site, and found it as hot, sweaty, frustrating and rewarding as usual.

The Dominican Republic is an amazing country, and one where I always have to recalibrate my expectations. It’s reasonable to be delayed for nearly 2 hours on the first day of work because a sudden torrential rainstorm flooded major streets up to the buses’ axles and inundated sidewalks and businesses. Our rendezvous with Anny, a Dominican physician helping the team, was an event constantly shifting in time, location and punctuality. The patients in the clinic were alternately grateful and insistent. This is all surrounded by the noises and music and smells and sights of a vibrant and colorful capital city. It’s always amazing that things get accomplished.

But they do. We arrived safely on Tuesday and, aside from a suitcase forgotten in the hustle to get through the airport in the DR and recovered later that night, had uneventful travels on the way here. Pill counting went quickly and was made much easier by the fact that we purchased the majority of our medications here in-country. This made for an easier time making the necessary preparations, and the medicines were already waiting for us at the hotel at our arrival.

The HOMBRE team has no veterans of this site. We have 7 medical students, 2 pharmacy students, and 2 “civilians” (one rising college junior and one student’s fiance) and although some of them have worked overseas in other sites, none were familiar with the DR or with Paraiso. Despite this, the team has come together in remarkable fashion: everyone pulling their weight and taking care of necessary tasks and requirements, even when not the most glamorous. Students have taken histories and vital signs, have examined patients and helped formulate treatment plans, and have written and filled prescriptions. Seema, our pharmacy director, has organized a pharmacy from scratch and figured out the best way to make it work. Sravi, this year’s community health directory, secured fluoride donations and took the lead in providing dental services for Paraiso’s children. And Todd, the overall student leader, has kept everyone and everything moving forward–a difficult task when the group had never worked together before this week.

And so the first 4 days are over. We provided care to approximately 300 patients in the clinic and saw another 30-45 on housecalls the last 3 days. We have recontacted our friends in Paraiso and continued the work to improve the community’s health and well being through honest and equal partnerships with the community members.

Tomorrow is a day off for the team, well-deserved. On Tuesday we shift our work site to Dr. Ramon Lopez’s Fundacion Sol Naciente health center. This center provides medical services at minimal cost for a different marginalized community, and provides needed medications for free. Although we do not have the same depth of community commitment in this site, working with Dr. Ramon allows us to provide care to patients who otherwise would lack access and provide support to a valued community partner.

If you’ve come to this site because of my Facebook and Twitter requests for help, thanks.

The trip is planned from June 1 to June 12, and will involve working with medical and pharmacy students from VCU. We’ll be working for a total of 8 days, with some planned R+R along the way.

If you’re interested, please e-mail me at DominicanAid@yahoo.comor leave a comment on the site. I’ll be happy to provide details.

With 3 US providers, a first year pharmacy student, some help from a Dominican Doc for a day, this is the team that accounted for around 600 patient visits and successfully helped organize and complete a community clean-up:

I had another brief brush with fame by being featured in Virginia Commonwealth University’s student newspaper.  Yippee!

We are in the early stages of setting up our next medical relief trip to Paraiso, in the Dominican Republic.  As noted above, the dates of the trip are from June 1-12, and will be in collaboration with medical and pharmacy students from Virginia Commomwealth University.

If you are interested in participating in this event and/or have any questions about it, please feel free to let me know.

If you are affiliated with academic programs (especially residency programs) and you think that this might be a good opportunity, I’d be very happy to discuss the project with you in more detail

The provider team returned yesterday and, speaking for myself, spent today catching up with sundry important tasks including mail and laundry.

The trip was very successful. I plan to post a summary/wrap-up soon.

So, with two clinics behind us, we have a better sense of how the project is going. The team has come together very well, with the SOMOS students stepping up and working hard to expand the services we provide, the providers working hard, and our pharmacy student, Deborah, coordinating and running a pharmacy that 2 days ago was a jumble of pills and bottles in our luggage. It is always amazing how quickly these teams come together, how the sense of mutual support develops, and how everyone works hard to provide care to our patients.

More housecalls today, and we found a few patients with newly-diagnosed chronic illnesses and were able to set them up with treatment.

Meanwhile, the community development project is working to analyze the results of the community meeting two days ago, and is working to develop the first step toward a meaningful project.

Overall, solid progress in these first few days. Tomorrow, a Dominican doctor (who worked with us in June) will be joining us and will allow us to see more patients in the clinic while continuing the housecalls. Margo, the nurse practitioner who is joining us on the trip for the first time, will be heading up the housecall team–we have a list of patients to be seen based on the results of the conversations with patients today.

Contact us: DominicanAid@yahoo.com
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Dominican Aid Society of Virginia