Healing the Children—Santa Marta Smiles Again
Neha A. Patel, MD Third-year resident, otolaryngology-head and neck surgery The New York Eye & Ear Infirmary New York, NY In September 2013, I joined a team of 25 other volunteers from the U.S.-based Healing the Children organization. After months of planning and packing, we arrived at the Hospital Universitario Fernando Troconis in Santa Marta, Colombia. Excitement was in the air as the local volunteers of the Colombia-based UNIMA organization and enthusiastic Colombian medical students greeted us at the airport. The travel grant I was awarded by the Humanitarian Efforts Committee of the AmericanAcademy of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery gave me the opportunity to help give life-altering care to Colombian families. In Colombia, an ecologic paradise is juxtaposed with the extreme poverty of many indigenous children. We screened about 100 surgical candidates upon arrival. The patient population ranged from ages six-weeks to 38 years old. Many of these patients had waited years for their surgery and many families spent months to gather the funding to travel by bus and boat. We traveled with all our equipment from New York. This included the OR surgical masks and instruments, the anesthesia machines, the PACU pulse oximeters, and beverages for patients. We operated on 59 patients in five days. The majority of surgical patients were children who needed repair of cleft lip and palate. In addition, patients underwent tympanostomy tube placement, cleft rhinoplasty, and treatment for velopharyngeal insufficiency. Patients with disfiguring hemangiomas, burns, and microtias were also treated. The team was led by Andrew A. Jacono, MD, a New York Facial Plastic Surgeon, who has led several mission trips throughout the world. Other members of the American Academy of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery also included attending surgeons Joseph Rousso, MD, and Augustine L. Moscatello, MD, facial plastic and reconstructive fellow Benjamin Talei, MD, and otolaryngology residents including myself and fourth-year resident Michael Bassiri-Tehrani, MD. Additionally, an amazing team of anesthesiologists, nurse anesthetists, pediatricians, nurses, surgical technicians, administrators, and local Colombian volunteers contributed an enormous amount of time and effort to help these young patients receive excellent care. Every day would start with a team meeting to optimize the flow of cases and make sure all patients were treated optimally. The highlight of the week was seeing the tears of joy on the faces of the mothers when they saw the immediate difference surgery made on our patients. Day after day, I got the honor of helping treat children who no longer had to be ostracized by craniofacial malformations. Many children were able to get immediate improvement in their ability to eat, drink, and speak. I was blessed to share this amazing experience with the best team anyone could dream of. There are still many children who need our help and my week in Colombia helped me realize how lucky we are to have the ability to help make a difference in their lives.

Neha A. Patel, MD
Third-year resident, otolaryngology-head and neck surgery
The New York Eye & Ear Infirmary
New York, NY
In September 2013, I joined a team of 25 other volunteers from the U.S.-based Healing the Children organization. After months of planning and packing, we arrived at the Hospital Universitario Fernando Troconis in Santa Marta, Colombia. Excitement was in the air as the local volunteers of the Colombia-based UNIMA organization and enthusiastic Colombian medical students greeted us at the airport. The travel grant I was awarded by the Humanitarian Efforts Committee of the AmericanAcademy of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery gave me the opportunity to help give life-altering care to Colombian families.
In Colombia, an ecologic paradise is juxtaposed with the extreme poverty of many indigenous children. We screened about 100 surgical candidates upon arrival. The patient population ranged from ages six-weeks to 38 years old. Many of these patients had waited years for their surgery and many families spent months to gather the funding to travel by bus and boat. We traveled with all our equipment from New York. This included the OR surgical masks and instruments, the anesthesia machines, the PACU pulse oximeters, and beverages for patients. We operated on 59 patients in five days. The majority of surgical patients were children who needed repair of cleft lip and palate. In addition, patients underwent tympanostomy tube placement, cleft rhinoplasty, and treatment for velopharyngeal insufficiency. Patients with disfiguring hemangiomas, burns, and microtias were also treated.

The team was led by Andrew A. Jacono, MD, a New York Facial Plastic Surgeon, who has led several mission trips throughout the world. Other members of the American Academy of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery also included attending surgeons Joseph Rousso, MD, and Augustine L. Moscatello, MD, facial plastic and reconstructive fellow Benjamin Talei, MD, and otolaryngology residents including myself and fourth-year resident Michael Bassiri-Tehrani, MD. Additionally, an amazing team of anesthesiologists, nurse anesthetists, pediatricians, nurses, surgical technicians, administrators, and local Colombian volunteers contributed an enormous amount of time and effort to help these young patients receive excellent care. Every day would start with a team meeting to optimize the flow of cases and make sure all patients were treated optimally.
The highlight of the week was seeing the tears of joy on the faces of the mothers when they saw the immediate difference surgery made on our patients. Day after day, I got the honor of helping treat children who no longer had to be ostracized by craniofacial malformations. Many children were able to get immediate improvement in their ability to eat, drink, and speak. I was blessed to share this amazing experience with the best team anyone could dream of. There are still many children who need our help and my week in Colombia helped me realize how lucky we are to have the ability to help make a difference in their lives.