
Amigos For Christ Brings Basic Health Care,
Essential Surgery To Nicaraguan Poor
By PRISCILLA GREEAR, Staff Writer
Published: September 25, 2003
CHINANDEGA, Nicaragua—When Richard Nutt, M.D., signed up a year
ago with his daughter for a mission trip to Nicaragua to give
medical support to a foundation, God—or one of his Franciscan
priests, anyway—had bigger plans in mind for this Demorest
orthopedic surgeon.
As he was adjusting to culture shock during the first few days in
the extremely poor Central American nation, he was completely
surprised when the director of the Chinandega 2001 Foundation,
Franciscan Father Marco Dessy, approached him and said, “How would
you like to be the medical director?”
“I said I’m just a dumb orthopedic surgeon. I have no
administrative experience … OK, I’ll try it,” Nutt recalled.
Now, a year later, the practicing surgeon and member of St.
Mark’s Church, Clarkesville, is steering “a runaway train,” as he
serves as the volunteer medical director of the Amigos for Christ
organization of Buford.
Amigos works through the Chinandega Foundation to provide free
medical services, as most poor can’t afford the cost of
medication.
Nutt is medical supervisor of the San Martin de Porres Surgical
Hospital, completed a year ago, which includes two operating and two
recovery rooms.
Amigos sends international mission teams of doctors and nurses
and operates a mobile medical unit that goes out to remote villages,
as well as a city clinic, providing medicine and equipment.
Amigos donor and board member Pat McAleer of Mobile, Ala., funded
construction of the $212,000 hospital.
“If they go to the clinic that the government provides and the
doctor writes a prescription most of them don’t have the money to
purchase a prescription,” Nutt said. “The medical clinic provides
medicine for free … We provide them with good medical care with
doctors who are really screened for their medical expertise.”
He takes “marching orders” from Amigos executive director John
Bland.
Walking through the facility in late July and seeing newly
installed supply shelves, Nutt said, “This is so nice.
Fantástico!”
In an operating room he pointed out surgical implements and
canisters of nitrous oxide and oxygen and spinal anesthesia, which
must be bought locally, for general anesthesia.
And check out those lobby chairs, donated by a church pew company
in Gainesville.
“There are 100 little individual items that have to be available.
Everything is in the detail, getting it functional. (The purchaser)
has to know what to get, how to get it,” he said. “There’s well over
$1 million in this place. Where it all comes from, Lord knows.”
The members thank God that crates packed with hundreds of
thousands of dollars worth of donated medical supplies from
hospitals, drug companies and the Catholic Medical Mission Board
keep coming. Expired or extra supplies are given away, such as
$25,000 worth of orthopedic instrumentation just given to a local
hospital.
But Nutt, who brought along his CD and book to study medical
terms in Spanish, noted that the more that comes, the greater the
need for donated supplies and equipment. The most “desperate need”
is for financial contributions.
“It seems the more you do, the more there is to do. The whole
operation keeps growing,” he said.
The surgeon was in Nicaragua for two weeks this summer with his
wife Mary-Ann and daughters Andrea and Georgianna. He worked with an
Amigos mission team from the Archdiocese of Atlanta and New Orleans
that came down July 26-Aug. 3.
The mobile unit and clinic “do what a general practitioner does
in the office every day,” he explained. In the hospital “we’re not
trying to be an acute care hospital, but an elective surgery
hospital.”
The first hospital patients arrived last spring. About120 people
had eye surgeries to restore sight. Several corrective operations
were performed for children born with cleft palettes. The goal is to
bring down surgical teams monthly.
Chinandega resident Maria Cecilia has received care for her son
Elvin, who was born with a cleft pallet, causing him difficulty
eating and talking.
“He already eats more. He gets sick less; he’s gaining weight.
He’s happy to talk. He didn’t talk before,” Cecilia said. “I’m
happy, although I don’t have enough to eat … I feel more peace, as
he’s a different child.”
There is also a dialysis clinic waiting to open, only the second
in Nicaragua, when they can find needed equipment. Nutt said there
are many agricultural workers in the area who have had kidney damage
and whose lives could be extended 10 to15 years through
dialysis.
“We have people who have mangled legs from auto accidents that
need further surgery and they have no way of doing it. Some need
amputations,” he added.
Missionary Denise Miller, M.D., a general surgeon from Longmont,
Colo., screened patients at clinics July 28-29 for cancer, hernia,
skin lesions and other conditions for September surgeries. She said
surgical appointment times would be printed in the local
newspaper.
After screening 62 patients in one day, many of whom live near
the Chinandega city trash dump and go to it regularly to search for
food, Miller said, “These people have to be given numbers. They’ll
swamp you … They’re sick. Everybody had runny noses, runny eyes,
their hair was weird, was blond or red from malnutrition, bites all
over, parasites.”
The patients she saw from Santa Matilde, a Chinandega residential
community created by the Foundation and Amigos for Christ and a few
other organizations to relocate residents from the dump, were much
healthier.
There’s also a health clinic, which the mobile unit visits.
Sabrina Bland, wife of the Amigos executive director and a
registered nurse, trained some residents as community first aid
workers. They were awarded certificates during a ceremony held
during the mission trip. “One of the best ways to (control) diseases
is to prevent them,” said one project leader. “They will be
attentive to you. When the doctor comes they will help them.”
Atlanta missionaries also presented a play “The Bad Fly Family,”
teaching children to cover latrines to prevent flies from spreading
parasites.
Children at the Foundation’s Haldo Dubon School also benefited
from the mobile mission, which stopped there one late July day, as
workers unloaded plastic containers of everything from Pokémon
vitamins to cough syrup from the back of the Land Rover and teachers
escorted earnest-looking students in to see “la doctora.” After
check-ups the children received a toothbrush and toothpaste.
The school is located near the dump, but children had to agree to
give up scavenging through it in order to receive a free balanced
meal at the school. Nevertheless, many youth complained of
respiratory problems as well as ear infections, flu and
diarrhea.
“We’ve seen lots of parasites, lots of grippe (flu), runny noses,
a lot of people have headaches. We’ve been trying to tell everybody
to make sure they wear their shoes all the time, to drink lots of
water. That headache can be a sign of dehydration,” said Jennifer
Pragle, a registered nurse and member of Prince of Peace Church,
Buford.
She added, “It’s hard for me to make the transition from an
intensive care unit to only having a stethoscope.”
As the children endure extreme poverty and many come from single
mother homes, the principal said that some get depressed and some
have attempted suicide. She said that teachers try to care for
mental health by offering support and encouragement.
“We have had some problems with them, but they have been
overcome,” she said.
And while students are urged to keep studying, she noted the
discouraging reality that most in the high school’s graduating class
will not be able to afford college.
The following day the medical team drove through a river and
traveled pothole-filled roads to arrive at a village near the border
with Honduras. Karla Brenes, M.D., feels privileged to work for
Amigos on the mobile unit caring for the poor.
“They are the most needy. They need love; they suffer a lot. I
like it, I feel happy with this work,” she said.
For Nutt the work is both frustrating and rewarding.
“The reward of doing it is just a simple thank you. It doesn’t
even have to be said. You can just feel it … You know you are needed
here,” he said. “(And) you don’t have to wade through a mountain of
red tape to take care of everybody.”
Miller noted how coordinating the work involves little miracles.
“You want something or the other. You don’t know how you’re going to
get it and someone comes in and donates it. It’s just been so
wonderful because in surgery I can go in and fix something and the
problem is gone.”
She recalled a patient suffering from a hernia, who came in
barely able to walk, much less work.
“I fixed him. The next day he walks in and he was on with his
life. It’s like, if we don’t care for them, they’re not going to get
taken care of,” she said. “I’m very impressed by the hospital here
and the potential.”
Nutt joined Miller in Chinandega again in early September for
surgeries.
“We just did what we had to do … Denise was unbelievable. She
brought her 16 people and they did 63 cases. I did a few. Everything
clicked. The equipment was made to work, the consumable supplies we
used, the medicines we used. It was a real hospital. It really
worked.”
Amigos for Christ, a nonprofit organization that began through
Prince of Peace Church, Buford, can be reached at (770) 614-9250.
The Web site is www.AmigosForChrist.org. |