Cleft Mission to Phalodi, India
Scott R. Chaiet, MD, University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics, Resident Humanitarian travel grantee Named after the lucky Hindu elephant, Ganesh had a double-clefted smile that captured our hearts. We hung a stuffed elephant from the anesthesia machine. The day before Ganesh’s operation, we closed the palate of his adorable sister, whose lip was repaired a year ago. There once was a woman named Kanti Jain, who grew up near Phalodi, Rajasthan, a poor state in northwest India. She was granted a chance to attend medical school in the United States with her best friend, Shareen, and they established prosperous careers at Memorial Sloan Kettering. In a selfless move, they gave up their careers to take over a small Phalodi clinic. The clinic evolved into the Human Benefit Services Hospital with a dormitory to house poor families, and a school for local poor children. Kanti established job training to empower local women, a dialysis center, and a rural mobile vaccination unit that now administers 100,000 vaccines a year. For the last six years, she has partnered with Boston-based Medical Missions for Children (MMFC), which provided cleft repair for five missions. Thanks to the generous travel grant funded by the Alcon Foundation, I joined MMFC in January 2012. It is difficult to capture my feelings of gratitude, respect, and admiration for these two women and their extended family during a truly amazing week. As a resident, I gained two mentors who gave me 24/7 access to their knowledge of surgical skills and humanitarian aid during our 35 cleft lip and palate procedures. Farhad Sigari, MD, MS, selflessly gives up multiple weeks a year from his new solo otolaryngology practice for MMFC missions. Merry E. Sebelik, MD, head and neck surgeon at the University of Tennessee, Memphis, renewed my passion for teaching, leadership, and humanitarianism, and inspired me to make many more trips. Seven other MMFC team members created a lean, mean patient-care machine in a remarkable week that centered on patient care … and masala chai tea.
Scott R. Chaiet, MD, University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics, Resident Humanitarian travel grantee
Named after the lucky Hindu elephant, Ganesh had a double-clefted smile that captured our hearts. We hung a stuffed elephant from the anesthesia machine. The day before Ganesh’s operation, we closed the palate of his adorable sister, whose lip was repaired a year ago. There once was a woman named Kanti Jain, who grew up near Phalodi, Rajasthan, a poor state in northwest India. She was granted a chance to attend medical school in the United States with her best friend, Shareen, and they established prosperous careers at Memorial Sloan Kettering.
In a selfless move, they gave up their careers to take over a small Phalodi clinic. The clinic evolved into the Human Benefit Services Hospital with a dormitory to house poor families, and a school for local poor children.
Kanti established job training to empower local women, a dialysis center, and a rural mobile vaccination unit that now administers 100,000 vaccines a year. For the last six years, she has partnered with Boston-based Medical Missions for Children (MMFC), which provided cleft repair for five missions.
Thanks to the generous travel grant funded by the Alcon Foundation, I joined MMFC in January 2012. It is difficult to capture my feelings of gratitude, respect, and admiration for these two women and their extended family during a truly amazing week.
As a resident, I gained two mentors who gave me 24/7 access to their knowledge of surgical skills and humanitarian aid during our 35 cleft lip and palate procedures. Farhad Sigari, MD, MS, selflessly gives up multiple weeks a year from his new solo otolaryngology practice for MMFC missions. Merry E. Sebelik, MD, head and neck surgeon at the University of Tennessee, Memphis, renewed my passion for teaching, leadership, and humanitarianism, and inspired me to make many more trips.
Seven other MMFC team members created a lean, mean patient-care machine in a remarkable week that centered on patient care … and masala chai tea.