World Medical Mission Cleft Lip/Palate Mission, Kijabe, Kenya
Jason C. Goodwin, MD, University of Missouri-Columbia Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, AAO-HNSF/Alcon Fnd. Humanitarian Resident Travel Grantee I switched careers from my previous job as a military pilot to medicine in large part because I wanted to make a more direct impact on individual lives. Thankfully, I’m reminded daily of the positive effect physicians can have on people’s lives. Often these reminders are small, although sometimes they can be striking. I saw striking examples of this positive effect on a recent mission trip to Africa. In October 2011, I had the opportunity to travel to Kijabe, Kenya, to work in the AIC–CURE International Children’s Hospital. My program director, C.W. David Chang, MD, led a small team to perform cleft lip and palate surgeries in this small mountain town north of Nairobi. While not a life-saving operation, these surgeries do offer children a new life. Each child had a unique, inspiring, and sometimes heartbreaking story. Unfortunately, there is a social stigma in Africa associated with these disorders, and abandonment is common. Mildred and Joyce are sisters, both born with bilateral cleft lip and palate. Following Joyce’s birth, the father left the family and the village shunned the mother. She struggled to provide for her children. A local aid worker found her and brought her to Kijabe. We performed successful cleft lip repair on both sisters. Their mother’s joy as she saw her children after surgery was priceless. The smile that broke through her reserved, stoic demeanor is a memory I will cherish for the rest of my life. I hope the surgery is the start of a more normal childhood for Mildred and Joyce. Team members included Academy members Dr. Chang, Eric J. Dobratz, MD, J. Cameron Kirchner, MD, Michelle B. Vessely, MD, and me. My wife, Bobbie, and Diane Kirchner completed the team as support staff. We performed 58 surgeries during the two-week mission. The experience was invaluable. Cleft surgeries are not a routine part of our training program. Professionally, I was allowed to challenge my operative skills. Personally, this trip strengthened my conviction about humanitarian work. I was fortunate my wife could accompany me. We’ve often talked about involving our family in humanitarian work and are now looking for ways to include our young children as well. Thank you to the Alcon Foundation and the AAO-HNS Foundation for their generous help in supporting humanitarian work around the world. Please contact humanitarian@entnet.org for questions about humanitarian efforts.
Jason C. Goodwin, MD, University of Missouri-Columbia Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, AAO-HNSF/Alcon Fnd. Humanitarian Resident Travel Grantee
I switched careers from my previous job as a military pilot to medicine in large part because I wanted to make a more direct impact on individual lives. Thankfully, I’m reminded daily of the positive effect physicians can have on people’s lives. Often these reminders are small, although sometimes they can be striking. I saw striking examples of this positive effect on a recent mission trip to Africa. In October 2011, I had the opportunity to travel to Kijabe, Kenya, to work in the AIC–CURE International Children’s Hospital. My program director, C.W. David Chang, MD, led a small team to perform cleft lip and palate surgeries in this small mountain town north of Nairobi.
While not a life-saving operation, these surgeries do offer children a new life. Each child had a unique, inspiring, and sometimes heartbreaking story. Unfortunately, there is a social stigma in Africa associated with these disorders, and abandonment is common. Mildred and Joyce are sisters, both born with bilateral cleft lip and palate. Following Joyce’s birth, the father left the family and the village shunned the mother. She struggled to provide for her children. A local aid worker found her and brought her to Kijabe. We performed successful cleft lip repair on both sisters. Their mother’s joy as she saw her children after surgery was priceless. The smile that broke through her reserved, stoic demeanor is a memory I will cherish for the rest of my life. I hope the surgery is the start of a more normal childhood for Mildred and Joyce.
Team members included Academy members Dr. Chang, Eric J. Dobratz, MD, J. Cameron Kirchner, MD, Michelle B. Vessely, MD, and me. My wife, Bobbie, and Diane Kirchner completed the team as support staff. We performed 58 surgeries during the two-week mission. The experience was invaluable. Cleft surgeries are not a routine part of our training program. Professionally, I was allowed to challenge my operative skills. Personally, this trip strengthened my conviction about humanitarian work. I was fortunate my wife could accompany me. We’ve often talked about involving our family in humanitarian work and are now looking for ways to include our young children as well.
Thank you to the Alcon Foundation and the AAO-HNS Foundation for their generous help in supporting humanitarian work around the world. Please contact humanitarian@entnet.org for questions about humanitarian efforts.