FACES International Cleft Team Visits Lambayeque, Peru
Adam M. Terella, MD, Oregon Health & Science University Portland, OR On January 20, our FACES International Cleft Team embarked on a 10-day mission trip to Lambayeque in northern Peru. Each morning, following a communal breakfast, our 23-member team, including surgeons, anesthesiologists, scrub techs, recovery nurses, and speech therapists from the Oregon Health & Science Center and Kaiser Permanente, Portland, would go to Belen Hospital in Trujillo. The days were full with surgery, speech therapy, and teaching. Surgeries were completed under the supervision of Tom D. Wang, MD, and Dana S. Smith, MD, and included primary and revision cleft lip and palate repair, secondary cleft rhinoplasty, and surgery for velopharyngeal insufficiency. Our speech therapy team completed therapy and screening sessions with young and old patients. This, my first mission trip, was undoubtedly one of the most rewarding experiences of my medical career. The experience was humbling, and yet personally so rewarding. The appreciation expressed by the patients and their families for our efforts were heartfelt, sincere, and made me proud to be an otolaryngologist, capable of providing a high level of care. The surgical and technical challenges of the trip provided an amazing opportunity to become a better surgeon, but truly represented just a small component of the mission experience. As a case in point, Chalon was our first cleft lip repair of the morning. Following Chalon’s uncomplicated primary cleft lip repair, her mother, Yovana, was allowed to come back to the recovery room to see her youngest daughter. She was apprehensive and worried about her daughter’s lip repair, but eager to be reunited with her child. As she saw her daughter, tears came to her eyes and she cracked a smile. “I am so happy and so excited to see her. Her lip looks so much better.” When asked about her hopes for her daughter’s future, she gazed down at her child and said, “I want my baby to be a great doctor.” This was only one of many experiences that made for an amazing trip. I would like to thank the AAO-HNSF’s Humanitarian Efforts Committee and the contributors to this program for helping support my participation in this rewarding and meaningful mission trip.
Adam M. Terella, MD, Oregon Health & Science University Portland, OR
On January 20, our FACES International Cleft Team embarked on a 10-day mission trip to Lambayeque in northern Peru.
Each morning, following a communal breakfast, our 23-member team, including surgeons, anesthesiologists, scrub techs, recovery nurses, and speech therapists from the Oregon Health & Science Center and Kaiser Permanente, Portland, would go to Belen Hospital in Trujillo. The days were full with surgery, speech therapy, and teaching. Surgeries were completed under the supervision of Tom D. Wang, MD, and Dana S. Smith, MD, and included primary and revision cleft lip and palate repair, secondary cleft rhinoplasty, and surgery for velopharyngeal insufficiency. Our speech therapy team completed therapy and screening sessions with young and old patients.
This, my first mission trip, was undoubtedly one of the most rewarding experiences of my medical career. The experience was humbling, and yet personally so rewarding. The appreciation expressed by the patients and their families for our efforts were heartfelt, sincere, and made me proud to be an otolaryngologist, capable of providing a high level of care. The surgical and technical challenges of the trip provided an amazing opportunity to become a better surgeon, but truly represented just a small component of the mission experience.
As a case in point, Chalon was our first cleft lip repair of the morning. Following Chalon’s uncomplicated primary cleft lip repair, her mother, Yovana, was allowed to come back to the recovery room to see her youngest daughter. She was apprehensive and worried about her daughter’s lip repair, but eager to be reunited with her child. As she saw her daughter, tears came to her eyes and she cracked a smile. “I am so happy and so excited to see her. Her lip looks so much better.” When asked about her hopes for her daughter’s future, she gazed down at her child and said, “I want my baby to be a great doctor.” This was only one of many experiences that made for an amazing trip.
I would like to thank the AAO-HNSF’s Humanitarian Efforts Committee and the contributors to this program for helping support my participation in this rewarding and meaningful mission trip.