We are getting so excited for our trip -- which will take place starting June 30th! Our fearless leaders trekked to El Corpus a few weeks ago to finalize logistics for the summer. We will keep you posted as we get closer to our departure date, but please see below for ways you can help.
Monday, May 5, 2014
Friday, January 17, 2014
DONATIONS FOR 2014 TRIP!
Thank you to all have supported us thus far! We encourage all alumni and friends of HHA to please donate to our upcoming adventure this summer! Below is the information on how to donate, both by mail and online. Please also email us at hha.leader@gmail.com with your current address if you would like to receive our Christmas holiday newsletter each year, or if you would like to donate any medical supplies to the trip this year.
How You Can Help
Make an online donation at https://secure.dev.unc.edu/gift/ in 3 easy steps:
1) Click Search Funds
2) Type in Honduran Health Alliance and select Search
3) Click Give and enter donation amount
OR
By mailing a check made out to "Honduran Health Alliance" to:
Attn: Honduran Health Alliance
c/o Paula Shackelford
The Medical Foundation of North Carolina, Inc.
880 MLK Jr. Boulevard, CB#7565
Chapel Hill NC, 27514-2600
OR
By mailing a check made out to "Honduran Health Alliance" to:
Attn: Honduran Health Alliance
c/o Paula Shackelford
The Medical Foundation of North Carolina, Inc.
880 MLK Jr. Boulevard, CB#7565
Chapel Hill NC, 27514-2600
Saturday, July 13, 2013
Results! Fiesta!
Zac and
Rachel, our medical student leaders, returned to El Corpus on Thursday from
Tegucigalpa with the pap smear results. We convened on Thursday night to go
over the results and follow-up plans for women in each community. We had about
365 patients, about 270 whom received pap smears, and of those that received
pap smears there were 28 abnormal findings that ranged the spectrum of
severity.
Yesterday
we traveled to our respective communities to give back results. One of the
health promoters will organize all the women that had abnormal results to go to
Ashonplafa in Choluteca, our local partner. At Ashonplafa the women will
receive biopsies and be counseled on what treatment is necessary following the
biopsy results. We will provide the transportation and biopsy fees as we have
done in the past.
We all had
a great time spending a final afternoon with our host families in community. It
was so pleasant to be able to return to our communities to say goodbye after
developing a relationship with them during the first week. The MS2s on the trip
will have an opportunity to return to the same communities as MS4s and thus our
goodbye was possibly more of a ‘see you later.’
After
packing up the clinic and reviewing pap results Thursday and returning results
on Friday, we only have one more day of work before returning to the states. We
will meet this afternoon to have an evaluation of HHA. This is HHAs 10th
anniversary and thus we feel a particular responsibility to evaluate how our
program has grown and how to effectively provide services in the future.
Finally, we will have a fiesta to celebrate our hard work!
This trip
would not have been possible without the generous donation of family members,
friends, physicians, alumni, and the medical school. We are grateful to be part
of such a legacy of UNC medical students and faculty that have gone before us.
We are excited to pass the torch for those returning next year.
¡Hasta en los Estados Unidos!
Christina and her host family. |
Typical homestay. |
Des organizing clinic breakdown. |
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
Amapala!
We just
returned from a fun trip in Amapala, an island about an hour south of
Choluteca. It was a much needed rest after an intense clinical week. It was a
beautiful island. We had plenty of time to explore the downtown area, which was
like walking through a time capsule lined with old, colorful buidlings. There
was also a lovely beach lined by shacks that sold delicious seafood that was
served at colorful tables situated next to a number of hammocks. We had a great
time relaxing and spending time with one another.
Tonight we
will evaluate our charlas and make changes for next year. Tomorrow we will take
down clinic, inventory supplies, and go over pap smear results with the leaders.
Friday we will return to communities to return results. Saturday we will have
time for evaluation and tos ay goodbye to our host families in El Corpus.
We are glad
to get back to work and finish the trip well. Thanks for your continued
support. More to come.
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Top of the volcano. |
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Beach. |
Saturday, July 6, 2013
Los Torreros!
Today we woke left El Corpus at 5:30am for Los Torreros, a rural, mountainous community about 2 hours away via chicken truck. We set up clinic in an elementary school and got to work by 9. It was an exhausting but fulfilling day as we saw over 60 patients while setting up and taking down a clinic.
We are now in Choluteca before leaving for Amapala, the beach, for a relaxing few days while waiting on pap results. We will then return to El Corpus to review results and follow-up plans with the residents on Wednesday, inventory clinic supplies on Thursday, and return to community to give back results on Friday.
This has been a very fulfilling as well as challenging clinic week. We have a number of women who likely have more than mild to moderate dysplasia and we have to grapple with how to ethically and sustainably define our role and scope of practice. We do provide follow-up for several women, 18 last year, who needed it at Ashonplafa, who can facilitate care for early cases.
We have had meaningful and difficult conversations to our role as an organization with these difficult realities.
We are grateful we are helping to prevent cervical cancer, provide family planning, and treat acute infections.
We are proud to have served about 400 women this week and will work hard to close this trip well.
Dr. Bliss leaves tonight. She has been such an enthusiastic teacher and engaged member of this trip. She has taken time to get to know all the students personally and we are so thankful for her guidance and support.
More to come from the beach!
Thursday, July 4, 2013
Guanacaste: 89 women + 4th of July
Yesterday was a big day. Between Monday and
Tuesday combined we saw a total of 69 women and yesterday we saw 89 women in
one day. We showed up per usual in a chicken truck donned in scrubs to a line
of over 50 women that had been waiting since 6 in the morning. Needless to say,
all a bit nervous, we hit the ground running immediately.
The MS2s that could speak Spanish fluently
enough to work on their own took their own patients (without an MS4) with the
oversight of our attendings. By 1pm we saw over 50 patients, which was a feat
of teamwork. Kyle, our pharmacist of the day, ran around with a walkie-talkie
handing out medications, taking vitals, and helping clean dirty speculums. The
attendings took the time to teach us even in the midst of the bustle. We took
all the time that the women needed to talk and ask questions while still moving
along at a clip. It was such an exciting challenge to serve so many women. It
will likely be are largest clinic day as the rest of the week we are expecting
about 70 women per day.
We saw 5 patients with possible cervical
cancer yesterday. Because of the extensive screening for and education about
cervical cancer in the US, it is very rare to find frank cervical cancer on
exam. Thus, this is a frustrating finding as we have technology available to
prevent such advancement of disease. However, this reinforces the importance of
HHA’s mission to screen and facilitate follow-up for mild and moderate dysplasia at Ashonplafa before cancer develops. We are grappling with how to best deal with more advanced cases that may e out of our scope of practice and funding capability.
Today was a bit of a breather as we saw 57
patients. We are all getting into a routine and learning new things: how to
insert and remove IUDs, remove cervical polyps, detect cervical cancer, detect
STIs on exam, and how to counsel about a variety of ailments, for example.
There was not a massive thunderstorm today, as there was yesterday, so all and
all the day was much smoother.
Liza
went to Ashonplafa, our local partner, to attend the follow-up visit with the
first lady who came with invasive cervical cancer on Monday. She will get an
idea of how HHA can support her treatment follow-up and provide support and
brief us on that process tonight. We will also have a little 4th of
July celebration this evening after putting in patient charts.
We are really enjoying spending time with
our attendings: Dr. Monica Selak, Dr. Mansa Sememya, and Dr. Susan Bliss. Drs.
Selak and Sememyaare 3rd-year family medicine residents at UNC and
Dr. Bliss is the OB/GYN clerkship director for UNC at the Charlotte campus.
They have all brought of enthusiasm and energy to this trip and we are thankful
for their intentional effort to teach us.
Tomorrow is our last clinic in Madrigales,
about an hour chicken truck ride from El Corpus. We will travel to Los
Torreros, one of our larger communities, on Saturday and set up clinic there
for the day. After that, clinic time will be complete. Time is flying by.
Internet is a bit difficult to come by here
so more to come as it’s possible. Cheers!
Our lovely attending and residents (all seated, from the left): Dr. Bliss, Dr. Semenya, and Dr. Selak. |
Preparing pap slides and wet preps at the lab. |
Monday, July 1, 2013
First day of clinic!
We had a lovely and very smoothly run first
day of clinic. We served the community of Guansale, which totaled to 32 women.
We will ramp up the pace quite significantly in future days but purposefully
started out with a smaller community as we are getting used to things. We
expect 300-400 women in the course of the week.
The very first lady we saw had invasive
cervical cancer diagnosed elsewhere. We are able to provide follow up for women with mild to moderate dysplasia at Ashonplafa but have never dealt with this severe of a case before. Thus, we are defining our mission statement and scope of practice in light of this challenge. This beginning
to clinical week really gave perspective to our work at preventing cervical cancer.
At clinic, an MS2 and MS4 are paired
together to gather a history and physical exam. This gives the MS2s a lot of
hands-on experience and the MS4s ample teaching opportunities. The doctors
consult with us about our assessment and plan and oversee our pap smears and
pelvic exams. It is amazing how much the MS4s have learned and it is such a
pleasure to have someone willing and excited to field questions throughout the
day. We consulted women about birth control, STIs, UTIs, HPV, and bacterial
vaginosis.
It is so fulfilling to see the clinic come
together so nicely. We are all working well together in teams. Rachel and Zac,
our med student leaders, did a wonderful job laying out our responsibilities
beforehand so that everything ran smoothly. We have a well-stocked pharmacy
with medications for the most common complaints as well as year-long supplies
of birth control pills, depoprovera shots, and IUDs.
It has been peacefully raining off and on
here. Everyone has been in a good mood as we are here doing what we have
planned to do for months. More to come.
Jordy and Dan taking a patient history. |
Check-in and lab. |
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