Providing Hope 4,000 Miles Away
Philip C. Chen, MD, University of Virginia resident and travel grantee Otolaryngology residents learn a tremendous amount of medical knowledge in five years. Hopefully, they also learn how to be more patient, compassionate, and caring. After all, human interaction is the primary factor differentiating medicine from basic science. Whether it is a specific patient or rotation, experiences throughout residency help shape one’s eventual practice. My two mission trips to Bolivia are experiences that played potent roles in my personal and professional development. I traveled to Santa Cruz, Bolivia’s largest city with a population of more than 1 million people, many of whom live in utter poverty on $3 a day. The founder of Misión de Esperanza, Cindy Thacker, became acquainted with the country that is third in the Western hemisphere on the Failed States Index after adopting three Bolivian children. In 2000, she founded Mission of Hope, Bolivia, to provide free medical care. The hospital treats about 500 patients each week comprising Quechan Indians, Bolivians, and Mennonites. Each spring, Charles W. Gross, MD, leads a team of otolaryngologists who donate their services to further the humanitarian and faith-based cause of the Mission. This mission also included Academy members William E. Gross, MD, and David C. Shonka Jr., MD, and resident Daniel A. Barker, MD. I returned from my first trip with a new humility and even greater desire to help the indigent. With intense enthusiasm for the work of the mission, I asked friends and family to donate to the organization and used social media to foster encouragement and dialogue among those with similar humanitarian visions. As a junior member on the team, I followed the lead of others. However, on my second trip I assumed a leadership role with increased responsibilities in surgery and overseeing post-operative care and discharge planning. Since resources were so limited, the challenges associated with these responsibilities were amplified. During my two trips, the group performed more than 125 surgeries, including cleft palate and microtia repair, stapedectomy, tympanoplasty, sinus surgery, traumatic rhinoplasty, and excisions of complex head and neck tumors. It was deeply moving during my second trip when patients from prior years traveled significant distances to greet us and express how well they have done since surgery. There is no greater gift or payment than their gratitude. Throughout my training, I welcomed the day when I could use my education to help those in need. Seeing my efforts produce fruit was powerful and inspiring. The media is inundated with stories pertaining to selfish ambition, conflict, and disarray. Organizations like Mission of Hope, Bolivia, however, vividly and emphatically display the strength and beauty of the human spirit. I am profoundly grateful to the AAO-HNSF Humanitarian Efforts Committee and the Alcon Foundation for supporting my efforts in this noble cause. It is heart-warming to know that we are not only competent physicians in otolaryngology–head and neck surgery, but also people who truly care about the well-being of our patients, communities, and world. To learn more about Mission of Hope, Bolivia, contact Executive Director Cindy Thacker by calling 1-434-977-4748 or emailing cindytha@cstone.net.
Philip C. Chen, MD, University of Virginia resident and travel grantee

Otolaryngology residents learn a tremendous amount of medical knowledge in five years. Hopefully, they also learn how to be more patient, compassionate, and caring. After all, human interaction is the primary factor differentiating medicine from basic science. Whether it is a specific patient or rotation, experiences throughout residency help shape one’s eventual practice. My two mission trips to Bolivia are experiences that played potent roles in my personal and professional development.
I traveled to Santa Cruz, Bolivia’s largest city with a population of more than 1 million people, many of whom live in utter poverty on $3 a day. The founder of Misión de Esperanza, Cindy Thacker, became acquainted with the country that is third in the Western hemisphere on the Failed States Index after adopting three Bolivian children. In 2000, she founded Mission of Hope, Bolivia, to provide free medical care. The hospital treats about 500 patients each week comprising Quechan Indians, Bolivians, and Mennonites.
Each spring, Charles W. Gross, MD, leads a team of otolaryngologists who donate their services to further the humanitarian and faith-based cause of the Mission. This mission also included Academy members William E. Gross, MD, and David C. Shonka Jr., MD, and resident Daniel A. Barker, MD. I returned from my first trip with a new humility and even greater desire to help the indigent.
With intense enthusiasm for the work of the mission, I asked friends and family to donate to the organization and used social media to foster encouragement and dialogue among those with similar humanitarian visions. As a junior member on the team, I followed the lead of others.
However, on my second trip I assumed a leadership role with increased responsibilities in surgery and overseeing post-operative care and discharge planning. Since resources were so limited, the challenges associated with these responsibilities were amplified.

During my two trips, the group performed more than 125 surgeries, including cleft palate and microtia repair, stapedectomy, tympanoplasty, sinus surgery, traumatic rhinoplasty, and excisions of complex head and neck tumors. It was deeply moving during my second trip when patients from prior years traveled significant distances to greet us and express how well they have done since surgery. There is no greater gift or payment than their gratitude. Throughout my training, I welcomed the day when I could use my education to help those in need. Seeing my efforts produce fruit was powerful and inspiring.
The media is inundated with stories pertaining to selfish ambition, conflict, and disarray. Organizations like Mission of Hope, Bolivia, however, vividly and emphatically display the strength and beauty of the human spirit.
I am profoundly grateful to the AAO-HNSF Humanitarian Efforts Committee and the Alcon Foundation for supporting my efforts in this noble cause. It is heart-warming to know that we are not only competent physicians in otolaryngology–head and neck surgery, but also people who truly care about the well-being of our patients, communities, and world.
To learn more about Mission of Hope, Bolivia, contact Executive Director Cindy Thacker by calling 1-434-977-4748 or emailing cindytha@cstone.net.