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Health & Fitness

Kaiser Permanente MDs bring healthcare help to Guatemala

Twelve Kaiser Permanente MDs, Nurses, others bring health care to remote Guatemalan village, as volunteers for "Faith in Practice."

Dr.Sarah Beekley, Kaiser Permanente Redwood City, with young patient in Guatemala clinic
Dr.Sarah Beekley, Kaiser Permanente Redwood City, with young patient in Guatemala clinic

Twelve Kaiser Permanente Northern California doctors, nurses, medical
technicians and physical therapists spent a busy and humbling week in
March, caring for Guatemala’s poorest and neediest citizens in the
remote Mayan Highlands. Their patients traveled by foot, by truck, and
bus over dusty mountain roads to get to the make-shift clinic where the
Kaiser Permanente volunteers were working as part of a Faith in Practice
health team.

Kaiser Permanente team, pictured: Dr. Hilary Bartels, KP Santa Rosa, Kristy Leonard, Midwife, KP Redwood City, Karen Preston, ret'd, Dr. Sarah Beekley, KP Redwood City, Dr. Irina deFischer, Ret'd., Dr. Scott Sinnott, ret'd, Dr. Stephanie Barlin, KP Santa Rosa, Dr. Carol Tereszkiewicz, KP Santa Rosa, Nurse Liz Snyder, KP Santa Rosa, Dr. Alexandra Klikoff, KP Santa Clara, Tech Eamon Keating, KP Santa Rosa, Nurse Jessica Kerger, KP Santa Rosa, Dr. Un Hui Har, KP Santa Clara, Nurse Lori Richardson

“We provide hope and healing in return for the grace
and gratitude of the Guatemalan people,” said Dr. Sarah Beekley, a
pediatrician at the Kaiser Permanente Redwood City Medical Center. “At
the end of the day we are the ones who feel blessed.”

Dr. Beekley and several Kaiser Permanente caregivers
have been making the trip for years, as part of “Faith in Practice,” an
ecumenical Christian group based in Texas. It has been serving the
health needs of Guatemala’s citizens for more than 25 years by
assembling groups of medical volunteers from the U.S. and worldwide to
travel there to help. This year’s Kaiser Permanente team, whose members
paid their own way to get to Guatemala, was the biggest yet for the
group.

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Faith In Practice professionals work with local
volunteers who find patients and help run the week-long clinics in the
Mayan Highlands, Dr. Beekley said.

Guatemalan patients at the "Faith in Practice" clinic where Kaiser Permanente doctors and others wolunteered for a week.

Dr. Beekley said the need is great: the Guatemalan health
care system is broken. Even when the municipal hospitals are open the
patients must provide their own medications, tests, and supplies. The
rate of chronic malnutrition here is the 4th worst in the world and 75
percent of the indigenous population live below the poverty line.

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“I’ve made the journey for nine years,” said Dr. Hilary
Bartels, an emergency physician at the Kaiser Permanente Santa Rosa
Medical Center, “because volunteering in Guatemala is something that is
so refreshing, renewing and brings a sense of indescribable gratitude.”

Dr. Hilary Bartels, Kaiser Permanente Santa Rosa, with patients in Guatemala

The team set up their clinics in the department of
Totonicapán, at the 8,000-foot level of the Sierra Madre in Guatemala.
Much of the economy is textiles, made by home artisans, and wheat or
maize farming. Many of the younger residents immigrated to the United
States long ago, and now send home money home to relatives in
Totonicapán

“Before we left for Guatemala, I treated an injured man
in the Emergency Department at Kaiser Permanente Santa Rosa. We talked
and learned he was from Totonicapán, where I’d been volunteering. He
asked if I could care for a young relative in Totonicapán when I
arrived. We were able to arrange it,” said Dr. Bartels.

Many of the children and adults seen by the medical
professionals were suffering from chronic conditions, like malnutrition,
birth defects, cancer, cerebral palsy, and more. The Kaiser Permanente
doctors were limited in their treatment options during their mobile
medical clinics, but provided acute and chronic medications, wound care,
some minor surgical interventions, nutrition advice, and pediatric and
prenatal vitamins. The team provided care for over 2,000 patients
Medical and surgical referrals were made for over 400 patients.

Patients line up for the "Faith in Practice" clinic where Kaiser Permanente caregivers volunteered in Guatemala

Dr. Alexandra Klikoff, an ObGyn at Kaiser Permanente
Santa Clara recalled such one man who brought in his nephew for care,
but asked Dr. Klikoff if she could provide a splint for an old arm
injury. “When I felt his arm, I realized his humerus was completely
broken, and had been like that for a year,” she said. “He was afraid
that I’d fix it that day, rather than first taking care of his nephew.”

The man, and many others, were referred to Faith in
Practice specialists at medical centers operating in the larger
Guatemalan cities. For the Kaiser Permanente doctors, the volunteer
mission was rewarding.

“The days are very long and physically demanding. Few
of the medical resources that one routinely takes for granted in the
States are available to us.,” said Dr. Beekley. “Rarely is our team
able to alleviate as much suffering and provide as much care as we would
like to. Yet, somehow we always finish the week feeling rewarded;
reconnected with our passion for healing and re-inspired to live a life
of service.”

For more information about volunteering with Faith in Practice, visit www.faithinpractice.org.

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