You can read about the Baylor Shoulder to Shoulder Foundation here: http://www.bcm.edu/familymed/international/s2smission.htm
Beautiful mountains (scattered with little houses) on the way to Santa Ana.
Colomoncagua- the nearest town, where Dr. Gomez and her family lived. It was around 3 miles from Santa Ana, but at least a 45 minute drive!
Santa Ana & the walk to clinic each morning-scattered with people, cows, horse, pigs, chickens, dogs, and cats
The New Clinic in Santa Ana, still under construction, but usable by Honduran standards. It will be very nice when finished and will include a dormitory for visiting brigades.
The Clinic waiting room (note the gigantic ladder in the middle of the room, sometimes also visited by dogs & a patient consult room
The Pharmacy &
The Lab, from which we were able to do a few simple tests: hematocrits, gram stains, wet mounts, UAs, and urine pregnancy tests
Me pulling teeth...Dr. Johnson probably pulled hundreds of teeth!
Where we slept- in a house in tents, for protection from mosquitoes
The Pila: water is Honduras is a precious commodity...so they fill up these concrete basins, called pilas with water, and then use it for washing dishes & clothes and bathing. There are clean buckets and dirty buckets; only the clean bucket goes into the water and you use it to fill the dirty buckets and use the water from the dirty buckets for whatever the task is. The girls were lucky enough to have an actual shower (very cold) out behind the house, but the boys had to use the pila for bucket showers.
On Sunday, our day off, we were able to visit a beautiful waterfall near Colomoncagua. This is the medical team in front of it.
Crossing the bridge across the river dividing Honduras and El Salvador on an afternoon hike.
And finally, my favorite picture from the trip...a home visit to an older woman suspected of having chronic osteomyelitis. We were all gathered out in her dirt courtyard, with her husband and her many grandchildren, and animals. In this picture Dr. Pierce and Kjirsten are explaining how she should take her medicines. I love it because it really captures a piece of what the experience was like--out in very rural country, with very limited medical resources, serving a very poor population.
The plan was to begin treating this lady with antibiotics, and then hopefully she would be able to get a ride to the nearest hospital for after the rainy season when the river went down for x-rays and further treatment.
(Not in the picture, but present in the scene was a pig...who kept trying to eat the skirt one of the granddaughters was wearing!)
Below, more pretty Honduras scenery...we saw some gorgeous sunsets (The pictures are not great though because they were taken from the back of a bouncing truck)
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