MMFC Cleft Mission to Phalodi, India
Peter C. Revenaugh, MD, Cleveland Clinic Resident Humanitarian Travel GranteeIn January 2011, a nine-member team from Medical Missions for Children (MMFC) traveled to the small town of Phalodi in rural Rajasthan, India. Here, the team was graciously hosted by Human Benefit Services Hospital and Kanti Jain, MD, hospital director. Not only has Dr. Jain established a full-service hospital in this remote region, hosting MMFC annually, but she also operates a vocational school for women and many agricultural and public health programs. Aware of the upcoming trip, the hospital’s outreach coordinator, Devi Singh Rajpurohit, scoured the countryside, visiting schools and meeting with local village elders and midwives, to identify and screen potential cleft-lip and palate patients. He found several teenagers and adults presenting for primary cleft-lip and palate closure, indicative of the unmet needs in this region. Farhad Sigari, MD, and Lawrence T. Herman, DMD, MD, our colleague in oral surgery, led the surgical portion of the trip with the seven other team members filling the countless roles necessary for a successful, safe, and organized trip. We performed 18 total surgeries including 16 cleft-lip repairs as well as cleft-palate and alveolus surgeries. MMFC team’s impressive organization and skills speak to the passion and dedication of those involved. These trips highlight the necessity of humanitarian outreach and the idea that a few dedicated persons can easily effect a significant change. Further, even a single individual can change the lives of others in a positive way, whether through joining a mission, or simply donating supplies, funding, or time. I would like to thank the AAO-HNSF and the Alcon Foundation for the generous grant to help make this trip possible—a trip that will hopefully be one of many as I continue my career with a focus in humanitarian service.
Peter C. Revenaugh, MD,
Cleveland Clinic
Resident Humanitarian Travel GranteeIn January 2011, a nine-member team from Medical Missions for Children (MMFC) traveled to the small town of Phalodi in rural Rajasthan, India. Here, the team was graciously hosted by Human Benefit Services Hospital and Kanti Jain, MD, hospital director.
Not only has Dr. Jain established a full-service hospital in this remote region, hosting MMFC annually, but she also operates a vocational school for women and many agricultural and public health programs.
Aware of the upcoming trip, the hospital’s outreach coordinator, Devi Singh Rajpurohit, scoured the countryside, visiting schools and meeting with local village elders and midwives, to identify and screen potential cleft-lip and palate patients. He found several teenagers and adults presenting for primary cleft-lip and palate closure, indicative of the unmet needs in this region.
Farhad Sigari, MD, and Lawrence T. Herman, DMD, MD, our colleague in oral surgery, led the surgical portion of the trip with the seven other team members filling the countless roles necessary for a successful, safe, and organized trip. We performed 18 total surgeries including 16 cleft-lip repairs as well as cleft-palate and alveolus surgeries.
MMFC team’s impressive organization and skills speak to the passion and dedication of those involved. These trips highlight the necessity of humanitarian outreach and the idea that a few dedicated persons can easily effect a significant change. Further, even a single individual can change the lives of others in a positive way, whether through joining a mission, or simply donating supplies, funding, or time.
I would like to thank the AAO-HNSF and the Alcon Foundation for the generous grant to help make this trip possible—a trip that will hopefully be one of many as I continue my career with a focus in humanitarian service.