Louisville Medicine Volume 65, Issue 3 | Page 21

ON THE COVER Shanna Barton, MD I am currently a medicine-pediatrics resident. Thanks to the partnership between Hand in Hand Ministries and the GLMS Foundation, I got to travel to Nicaragua this past winter to provide outpatient pediatric care to children enrolled in the educational program. This program provides transportation to and from a private Nicaraguan school, as well as additional educational resources (such as textbooks and tutoring services for math, physics and chemistry), as well as occasional meals, which are provided at a local educational center. Each child is also assigned a case manager to assist in overall educational needs as well as an on- site social worker and psychologist, should they require additional assistance. In order to remain enrolled in the program, children must maintain a superb grade point average (most are at the top of their class), regularly a ttend classes and be seen once yearly by the medical team affiliated with Hand in Hand. The medical team worked daily in a local clinic. Our medical team consisted of two family medicine attendings, one adult hematologist/ oncologist, one pediatric hematologist/oncologist, two pediatric residents, one child psychiatrist, one OB/gyn, a lab technician, a biomedical engineer, a dermatologist and three neurosurgeons. Daily, we worked in an established clinic to provide care to the children. Primary complaints ranged from routine well exams to abdominal pain, headaches and associated vision changes, and sore throat, among others. While visiting the women’s hospital and the pediatric hospital, I was impressed with their resources and facilities. Wards were crowded, supplies and technology were minimal, and the facili- ties were not in great condition. But I was inspired by what these professionals were able to accomplish with scant resources. For instance, the women’s hospital had established a milk bank on the property to assist babies in the NICU on site. Their lab was well equipped, and while they were unable to test for all necessary or- ganisms, they certainly made the best of what was available. I felt a similar resourcefulness amongst the families and children we met. For instance, on the day of our home visit I was paired with a child psychiatrist, and we visited a family of three children enrolled in the program and their parents. Hand in Hand provided 40 dollars in total for lunch for the seven of us. While that task may have been daunting for most, this family was actually able to feed a group of nine (the family also invited their housekeeper and her daughter) a full meal including chicken, rice, plantains and homemade orange juice. They had money left over to take our group to downtown Managua to tour the waterfront and the national palace, which had been converted into an art gallery. nately, in an economy like Nicaragua’s this still may not be enough; despite your knowledge there may not be a job in which to utilize your talents. It is in this space that I feel Hand in Hand does a strong job. Children are funneled into a private school established in Nicaragua, as opposed to an American school, so that they can obtain a true Nicaraguan education. Children are encouraged from a young age to work hard in school and attain a strong work ethic, for wherever they go, that will be an invaluable skill. While I only spent a week in a foreign country, I am sure that what I’ve learned from the people I have met will have a lasting influence on the way I practice medicine. Many Kentucky families also fall at or below the poverty line, subsisting on the supplemental food program and relying on public transportation. And while I can make an argument that while children in our city have adequate access to health care, just as in Nicaragua, they may be unable to get to their appointments. Public transportation is, at best, moderately reliable, and in rural areas mostly absent. Most families work two jobs with several children at home, and thus getting one child to the doctor becomes a full day affair. Add to that, a family who does not speak English as their primary language who must navigate the complexities of our health care system, which can be downright disastrous, or merely intimidating. I spent one week in Nicaragua with an interpreter and still felt lost and uneasy at times during an appointment, leaning on my scant understanding of Spanish, hand signals and body language to make up the difference (not a reliable method). How much more difficult in a town would my experience have been if I did not also have a host home, traveling group and group transportation? Based on these recent experiences, I plan to work toward changing my outlook on my impoverished, uneducated and refugee patients. Rather than frustration at seeing a non-English speaking patient on the schedule, I hope to greet them with empathy and patience as they navigate a new health care system and new country. I must work to tailor my outpatient appointments and hospital visits to the patient, realizing that even the most basic task for me may be a huge obstacle for them. Such things as food, education and health insurance are privileges I expect to have, and yet I know that does not hold true for too many. I intend to serve as an advocate for my patients to obtain the same privileges, while also recognizing how blessed I am in my own situation. While I may have felt out of place in Nicaragua, I hope that the knowledge I have gained of our own local resources aids my current and future patients and enables me to serve them not only as a physician, but as an educator, social supporter and advocate. Dr. Barton is a pediatric resident at Norton Children’s Hospital I continually heard the same advice from the citizens. From the coffee farmer we visited, from the clinic staff and from the owner of a local vocational school, we understood that simply providing money is not a solution. You must also have the tools needed to learn how to make a living and to balance your expenses. Unfortu- AUGUST 2017 19