Med Team Update
We returned to the same barrio of La Romana that we have visited on the Friday of each of our last two trips to the D.R., though we were in a different neighborhood/site. We treated upwards of 170 patients today, more than we have ever done at any clinic before. We saw lots of patients with scabies today, and one little boy who was so covered in scabies we had to send him to the hospital. Dr. Denny, one of the Dominican doctors we work with, will do follow up care on this boy and tell us how he fares in the coming days.
Construction Update
The construction team finished a ton of painting on two houses today. We had the absolute joy of passing the keys to two families who, as of today, leave dirt-floor homes with roofs with many quarter to baseball size holes in them. One of the families had a child named Emelin (boy age 9) who had become a special friend to your youngest traveler, Hayden French. The look on Hayden's face when he realized that the house we were building was for his special friend was indescribable. After having spent a week at Batey 50, and for some of our travelers it was their third annual visit there, saying goodbye to our special friends is difficult. We are already counting the days until we can see them again.
(Photos of the clinic and video of giving away the two houses to come soon.)
Saturday, November 24, 2012
Thursday, November 22, 2012
Thanksgiving 2012
Today the med team went to a HUGE batey...1000s of residents. Saw more patients today than any other day this week (138). It was an uneventful clinic -- meaning no emergencies -- though Emma B., Hannah D. and Lauren F. did have to dress an angry looking and infected wound on a little boy. The construction team worked very hard breaking apart miserable, orange-red claylike rock in order to tamp down more subfloor in a house on Batey 50. After our work day ended, we had a quick tour of the Good Samaritan Hospital, the organization that coordinates all of the medical clinics on the bateys. Then we visited the same orphanage we have gone to on previous years and many team members have special friends that live there. It is emotional and poignant to have such sweet reunions on Thanksgiving. By far the highlight of our night was having a massive Thanksgiving party with our hosts, who obviously don't celebrate Thanksgiving, at a private villa at a local resort. We had a dance party, learned the meringue and went night swimming in a beautiful built in pool. The contrast to the days we have spent with the extremely poor on the bateys was stark. Hope all our CT friends and family had wonderful Thanksgiving holidays.
Wednesday, November 21
Med Team Update 11/21 (SG)
Our group of 12 went to Batey La Gina, a 40-minute drive through rolling cane fields with the distant mountains as backdrop. Upon arrival I immediately recognized this location from 2 years ago. The work space was tiny. Setting up the clinic is like solving a puzzle each morning with the shoe distribution location always being the final piece. Rebecca, Suzanne and Lauren kept the pharmacy perking like a well-oiled machine with our only frustration being the lack of infant Tylenol. Our team doctors, Marilyn and Peter, settled right in their places alongside the interpreters, Juan Roberto at the door with Greg weighing and keeping count. Tio Ron, Ian and Jimmy squeezed arms (aka took blood pressure) of all 113 of our patients while Cole and Jake manned the bug juice table. I calculated shoe size from a distance, distributing almost all the shoes we carried with us this morning. After a prayer of gratitude from Andrea, one of our Dominican Haitian host/interpreters, the team ate rice with stewed beef, ham and cheese or peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and the obligatory "red" soda. Then off to distribute food from house to house, 150 bags! We gratefully floated in the Caribbean Sea this afternoon, cleansed of sweat and dirt, recalibrating for our last two days.
Construction Team Update 11/21 (JF)
We had a great crew on construction at Batey 50 today. There was great teamwork and we worked quickly and efficiently. Hannah, Cory, Winnie, Grace and Katie painted the doors which were hung yesterday and then did some all-important playing with the completely lovable children on Batey 50. Mason, Emma B., Hayden F. (my youngest son), Mr. Bracker, Mr. Crosson, Richard B., Rachel C., Alannah and I shoveled sand and gravel, sifted sand, and hauled wet cement so that David B. could level it on top of the sub-floors which were tamped into place yesterday. The house is really coming along.
Here is an example of typical house construction on Batey 50. Below is a video of the construction process and shots of the what a finished house looks like (the house we completed last year).
Our group of 12 went to Batey La Gina, a 40-minute drive through rolling cane fields with the distant mountains as backdrop. Upon arrival I immediately recognized this location from 2 years ago. The work space was tiny. Setting up the clinic is like solving a puzzle each morning with the shoe distribution location always being the final piece. Rebecca, Suzanne and Lauren kept the pharmacy perking like a well-oiled machine with our only frustration being the lack of infant Tylenol. Our team doctors, Marilyn and Peter, settled right in their places alongside the interpreters, Juan Roberto at the door with Greg weighing and keeping count. Tio Ron, Ian and Jimmy squeezed arms (aka took blood pressure) of all 113 of our patients while Cole and Jake manned the bug juice table. I calculated shoe size from a distance, distributing almost all the shoes we carried with us this morning. After a prayer of gratitude from Andrea, one of our Dominican Haitian host/interpreters, the team ate rice with stewed beef, ham and cheese or peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and the obligatory "red" soda. Then off to distribute food from house to house, 150 bags! We gratefully floated in the Caribbean Sea this afternoon, cleansed of sweat and dirt, recalibrating for our last two days.
Construction Team Update 11/21 (JF)
We had a great crew on construction at Batey 50 today. There was great teamwork and we worked quickly and efficiently. Hannah, Cory, Winnie, Grace and Katie painted the doors which were hung yesterday and then did some all-important playing with the completely lovable children on Batey 50. Mason, Emma B., Hayden F. (my youngest son), Mr. Bracker, Mr. Crosson, Richard B., Rachel C., Alannah and I shoveled sand and gravel, sifted sand, and hauled wet cement so that David B. could level it on top of the sub-floors which were tamped into place yesterday. The house is really coming along.
Here is an example of typical house construction on Batey 50. Below is a video of the construction process and shots of the what a finished house looks like (the house we completed last year).
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
November, 20 -- our third annual visit to Batey Guazabal
This batey is more spread out, rural (it is almost pastoral) than the batey we went to on Monday. We love this place for several reasons. Over the course of our three visits here we have made some very special friends here. Plus, this batey really feels like a community, whereas some others feel very transient. There were numerous highlights from today, but for now the one we will share is a super sweet round of "Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes" led by Liz Benfield '07.
From Rachel C.
At Batey Guazabel two years ago, I was on traffic control in the med clinic when a woman came in alone, causing a stir among several other women who demanded that she bring her son to see the doctor. She reluctantly left and returned with a small boy who waited with me while his mother was examined. He was filthy, his clothes were full of holes, he didn't speak -- except the word Mami -- and I spent most of the time trying to getting him to play patty cake with me. The best he could manage was to hold his hands up in front of him, palms together, while I slowly clapped first one of his hands and then the other, over and over.
Last year, as we drove to Guazabel, I wondered if we would see him again, an odd question perhaps (where else would he be?). When we got off the bus, he was there to greet us along with all the other kids. This time, when we asked como te llamas? he told us his name is Jacson and he needed zapatos nuevos -- new shoes. Though the shoes he was wearing were too small, his clothes were clean, his mother was much more attentive to him (though she still asked us to take him with us when we left), and he had a lot to say. When it was his turn at bat in the whiffle ball game, Mason started to help him swing, but Jacson waved him off and smacked the first pitch that Ian tossed. He is perhaps a lot less compromised than we at first thought.
Yesterday, we saw Jacson again. He's still very small -- 12 years old and only 41 pounds -- but he has clearly made a lot of progress in the last year. Still more verbal, he seems to have figured out how to make his way in his world. Another pair of new shoes, cookies and a soda after our lunch, lots of attention during our visit. We showed him the photos we took of him last year, and he led us to his house when we were distributing the food. He danced with us and played "head, shoulders, knees, and toes" (mostly focused on his toes). As always, it was hard to leave.
At Batey Guazabel two years ago, I was on traffic control in the med clinic when a woman came in alone, causing a stir among several other women who demanded that she bring her son to see the doctor. She reluctantly left and returned with a small boy who waited with me while his mother was examined. He was filthy, his clothes were full of holes, he didn't speak -- except the word Mami -- and I spent most of the time trying to getting him to play patty cake with me. The best he could manage was to hold his hands up in front of him, palms together, while I slowly clapped first one of his hands and then the other, over and over.
Last year, as we drove to Guazabel, I wondered if we would see him again, an odd question perhaps (where else would he be?). When we got off the bus, he was there to greet us along with all the other kids. This time, when we asked como te llamas? he told us his name is Jacson and he needed zapatos nuevos -- new shoes. Though the shoes he was wearing were too small, his clothes were clean, his mother was much more attentive to him (though she still asked us to take him with us when we left), and he had a lot to say. When it was his turn at bat in the whiffle ball game, Mason started to help him swing, but Jacson waved him off and smacked the first pitch that Ian tossed. He is perhaps a lot less compromised than we at first thought.
Yesterday, we saw Jacson again. He's still very small -- 12 years old and only 41 pounds -- but he has clearly made a lot of progress in the last year. Still more verbal, he seems to have figured out how to make his way in his world. Another pair of new shoes, cookies and a soda after our lunch, lots of attention during our visit. We showed him the photos we took of him last year, and he led us to his house when we were distributing the food. He danced with us and played "head, shoulders, knees, and toes" (mostly focused on his toes). As always, it was hard to leave.
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
Monday, November 19
Day 1 saw a return to Batey Pinita for our first med clinic. This is the same batey we went to on day 1 in 2011. The clinic went very well. Some of the first year travelers dove right in and got to work: Grace, Winnie, Suzanne D. (Hannah's mom), Katie. Batey Pinita is very, very poor. It is often a place where new transplants from Haiti are taken. There is something very raw about this place.
The clinic went very well; we treated 117 patients. We did take an 11-day-old baby back to the hospital with us to be rehydrated and give some lactation consulting to the 18-year-old mom. After the clinic was finished, we had the absolute joy of doing door to door and delivering food kits to the residents. What an incredible and wonderful experience. It made all of our work fundraising feel totally worth it!
The construction team had their first day out on Batey 50. Anchored by John Bracker and alumni parent Richard Benfield, the men on the team (Jimmy P, Greg V, David Benfield, Jake D) worked like dogs and poured a cement floor in a three room house that is big enough for nine people. Jake D hauled 19 loads of cement over the day! Photos of the construction team to come!
The clinic went very well; we treated 117 patients. We did take an 11-day-old baby back to the hospital with us to be rehydrated and give some lactation consulting to the 18-year-old mom. After the clinic was finished, we had the absolute joy of doing door to door and delivering food kits to the residents. What an incredible and wonderful experience. It made all of our work fundraising feel totally worth it!
The construction team had their first day out on Batey 50. Anchored by John Bracker and alumni parent Richard Benfield, the men on the team (Jimmy P, Greg V, David Benfield, Jake D) worked like dogs and poured a cement floor in a three room house that is big enough for nine people. Jake D hauled 19 loads of cement over the day! Photos of the construction team to come!
Monday, November 19, 2012
Sunday, November 18
Happy 17th birthday to Jimmy Petras!
We spent our morning unpacking all the meds, shoes and toys we brought with us. All of our 47 duffle bags needed to be unpacked, brought to the main room (dining hall) where we congregate. It is controlled chaos at its best.
After lunch a group of us took a walk around La Romana. Then the whole team traveled to see Pilar and Francisco, an elderly couple that lives alone out in the midst of miles and miles of sugar cane.
We spent our morning unpacking all the meds, shoes and toys we brought with us. All of our 47 duffle bags needed to be unpacked, brought to the main room (dining hall) where we congregate. It is controlled chaos at its best.
After lunch a group of us took a walk around La Romana. Then the whole team traveled to see Pilar and Francisco, an elderly couple that lives alone out in the midst of miles and miles of sugar cane.
Saturday, November 17, 2012
Traveling to La Romana
We are here and all of our travel details went very well! Our day started with learning that Jimmy Petras' dad was able to help us get our second bag fees waived by JetBlue. We were elated to learn that all the shoes and meds that the community donated would now be able to come with us at no extra cost. While we were prepared to spend the $50 per bag, it sure is heartwarming that now all of the funds we raised from all our generous donors can go directly to providing life changing necessities for the very poor of this region.
The second exciting moment came when we connected with one of our alumni travelers in the midst of JFK Airport. Lauren Freisinger '10, a junior at St. Olaf in Minnesota, left her campus at 4:30 a.m. and we reunited with her in the JetBlue terminal. Her dad, Ron, is also one of our team members and no one was more excited to see Lauren than Tio Ron!
Third on the list was connecting with another alum and an alumni parent, David Benfield '09 and his dad Richard, in the Santo Domingo Airport. Now 28 or our 29 travelers are in La Romana. Our last team member arrives at the end of our first workday (Monday).
Thanks for checking in on our travel day. More news from La Romana tomorrow!
The second exciting moment came when we connected with one of our alumni travelers in the midst of JFK Airport. Lauren Freisinger '10, a junior at St. Olaf in Minnesota, left her campus at 4:30 a.m. and we reunited with her in the JetBlue terminal. Her dad, Ron, is also one of our team members and no one was more excited to see Lauren than Tio Ron!
Third on the list was connecting with another alum and an alumni parent, David Benfield '09 and his dad Richard, in the Santo Domingo Airport. Now 28 or our 29 travelers are in La Romana. Our last team member arrives at the end of our first workday (Monday).
Thanks for checking in on our travel day. More news from La Romana tomorrow!
Friday, November 16, 2012
An Embarrassment of Riches
La Fuerza Azul, the blue force, is what we call the Dominican Republic Service Team. Part of our pre-trip preparations include collecting shoes and over-the-counter meds from all the families connected to the Watkinson community. Here is what it amounted to...it was so much that we decided to film it in the midst of packing.
Monday, November 12, 2012
2012 Car Wash Fundraiser
Over the course of 12 hours of washing cars, the DRST raised more than $1,300. We think that might set some sort of record!
Monday, May 14, 2012
Packing List
- Passport
- ID
- Money
Clothing/Footwear
- Sneakers ÿ Work Shoes ÿ dress Shoes
- 6 Work Outfits: Work Shirts/ Shorts/ Socks/ Underclothing (ladies: 7 bras)
- 1 Dress Outfit (Guys: Long Pants, Girls: No Spaghetti Straps)
- Clothes to sleep in
- Clothing for when not at work (8 days): Shirts/Shorts/Underclothing/Socks
- Bathing Suit (Girls: skimpy bikinis not recommended)
- Hat to wear at work/ Bandana
- Work Gloves if doing construction, multiple pairs
- Sunglasses
Shower Items
- Towel / Beach Towel
- Shampoo/ Conditioner
- Face Wash + Wash Cloth
- Soap
- Shower Shoes/Flip Flops
- Toothbrushes (bring a spare)/ Toothpaste/ Mouthwash/ Floss
- Razor / Shaving Cream
- Deodorant
- Hair Brush/ Comb/ Hair Stuff
- Tweezers
- Glasses/ Contact Lens Solution & case
- Personal Items / Girl Stuff
Medications + Preventative
Items
- Sunscreen/ after Sun lotion or Aloe Gel
- Chapstick with Sunscreen
- Malaria Pills/ Cipro/ Flagyl
- OTC Meds: Tylenol, Imodium AD, Dramamine, Acne Medication, Vitamins, and Antacids, cough drops
- Any Prescription Medication/Inhalers
- Alcohol Wipes/Wet Ones with Antibacterial, could use 10/day
- Antibacterial Hand Gel
- Powdered Gatorade/PowerAde
- Bug Bands/ Insect Repellant
- Water Bottle, one with lid!
Optional Personal Items
- Notebook/Journal
- Spanish Dictionary/Creole Dictionary
- Bag for dirty laundry
- Snacks/Energy Bars/Gum
- Flash Light/Batteries
- I-pod, headphones
- Camera/Film/Charger
- Ear Plugs, recommended
- Bottle Opener
- Duct Tape
- Give Away’s—Stickers are a great idea
- Lysol Spray
- Cell Phone/Charger (for use in the airports and as an alarm clock)
- Deck of Cards/ Games to play in the dining hall during evening free time
- Extension cord
Memos
- Liquids cannot be packed in carry on luggage. This includes toothpaste.
- Bags must be 50 Pounds or under
- Sweatshirt or longed sleeved shirt for in the airport—it gets chilly!
- Prescription Drugs must be in their original containers and the name must match your name on your passport.
- Carry prescription drugs in your carry on—if your luggage is lost you could be without your luggage for more then 24 hours.
- You will want extra writing utensils for at medical clinics
- Lip-Gloss is considered a liquid.
- Packing your clothes in large ziploc bags saves space, and you can close the dirty clothes back up—this also protects against ants.
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