Article from July 2006
Cuban, U.S and Honduran Doctors Work Together on Medical
Brigades to Honduras
Written by Dan Bacher Tuesday, 25 July 2006
While the Bush administration has taken an increasingly hostile
stance toward Cuba, U.S. and Cuban doctors worked together for
the first time this May during an historic 7-day Medical Brigade
to Honduras.
The brigade, organized by Bill Camp, Executive Secretary of
the Sacramento Central Labor Council, in collaboration with the
Birthing Project and other organizations, provided badly needed
medical care, medicine and supplies to the Garifuna people of
the Atlantic coast of Honduras.
The brigadistas included 24 North Americans, 4 Garifuna physicians
(all recent graduates of the Latin American School of Medicine
in Havana), 2 Garifuna Interns, 7 Cuban physicians and 3 Cuban
journalists. They served
3116 patients in the communities of Limon, Punta Piedra, Ciriboya,
Tochmacho, Batalla, El Pino, Orotina and La Ceib
The Garifuna are a unique cultural and ethnic group found along
the Carribean coast of Honduras, Belize, Guatemala, Nicaragua
and in the Carribean islands. They first appeared in this region
over 300 years ago,
when escaped and shipwrecked West African slaves mixed with the
native Caribs who provided them refuge on Saint Vincent Island.
Their language, Garifuna, derives from the Arawak and Carib languages.
The Garifuna have
kept their African musical and religious traditions over the centuries.
"This brigade set a new standard for Americans to build
foreign policy," said Camp. "We don't need George Bush
to set our foreign policy. Here in California we are building
a new foreign policy by expanding our cooperative
efforts between Cuban and U.S. doctors and Honduran graduates
of the Latin American School of Medicine."
The next brigade of Cuban, U.S. and Honduran doctors to the
Honduran Garifuna communities is set from November 8 thru November
18. Meanwhile, another medical brigade sponsored by AHMEN (the
Alabama Honduras Medical Education Network), was in Honduras through
July 18.
The brigade participants provided general medical, pediatric,
dental and vision care. They also offered continuing education
for midwives, gynecological care and screening and treatment of
cervical cancer.
"The people in the Garifuna communities live off fishing
and growing their own crops," said Kathyrn Hall-Trujillo,
founder of the Birthing Project, who organized a number of volunteers
from the project to participate in the
brigade. "What they don't have is cash, cars and other resources.
And access to health care is very hard in the remote communities."
Parasite infections are a problem among the Garifuna, so the
brigadistas brought plenty of "worm medicine" with them.
The brigade doctors removed a foreign object from one young boy's
ear, treated one guy with a partially
chopped off finger and removed a silver from another man's eye,
according to Hall.
Another medical problem that has recently entered Garifuna communities
is the HIV virus; Hall met one little boy whose parents had both
died of AIDS.
"The Garifuna don't know about AIDS and how to protect
themselves from it, since they don't have electricity and aren't
tuned into the radio, TV and other media," said Hall. "And
the idea of wearing a condom goes against
their whole culture."
Bill Camp become introduced to the Honduran Garifuna communities
when his brother, Dr. Tom Camp, requested his support in constructing
the first community clinic in the Garifuna community of Ciriboya.
In the process, Camp became acquainted with the Hondurans studying
medicine in Cuba and decided
to begin the medical brigades.
Accompanying Camp and Hall were Birthing Project staff members
Francisco Lefebre, Umsalaama Zaimah, CNM, Nonkululeku Tyehemba,
Dr. Nevorn Askari, Elaine Quabner, Leona Spivey, Janeyne Sexton
and RoLanda Allaha Wilkins; Bud McKinnney, Vice President, Local
162, Sheet Metal Workers Assocation,
AFL-CIO; Dr. Cedric Edwards, the first U.S. graduate of the Latin
American School of Medicine of Cuba; noted photographer Arnold
Trujillo; and Phil Nelson, a retired Sacramento fire chief. All
members of the delegation, including staff members, raised funds
to cover the trip expenses.
"It was a great trip and I learned a lot," said Nelson,
who was born in Jamaica. "I was impressed that we saw over
3,000 people in just one week. It was clear that we were the only
source of health care in the region. I will
definitely go on the brigade again; those are my people and I
was moved by the beautiful kids that I saw."
Dr. Luther Castillo Harry, coordinator of the Community Hospital
of Ciriboya, said the cooperative efforts by Cubans, Hondurans
and North Americans are serving as a model for the future development
of clinics and
health care for Garifuna communities.
"The Project Luagu Hatuadi Waduhenu (for the health of
our communities) arose in 1999 as a initiative of the Garifuna
students in Cuba seeking a way of contributing to the betterment
of the health of our communities," said
Harry. "We decided to donate 15 days of our month of vacation
working in the Honduran Garifuna communities, shoulder-to-shoulder
with the Cuban doctors."
Harry cited the case of a 90-year-old grandmother who said,
after being treated by a Garifuna doctor in the maternal tongue
for the first time, "Now I can die - it is the first time
that a doctor has examined me without
disgust."
Not only was the May brigade great for the patients, but also
for the doctors themselves. "It was fantastic to have Cuban,
U.S. and Honduran doctors all treating one patient," said
Camp. "The American doctors learned
from the Cuban doctors, while the Cuban doctors learned from the
U.S. doctors. And the Hondurans were able to share their expertise
in working in the Garifuna communities with the Cuban and American
doctors. It was a very exciting experience."
Sponsors of the medical brigade included CHIMES (California
Honduras Institute for Medical Education and Supplies), PINCC
(Prevention International Cervical Cancer), AHMEN and Project
Luagu, Hatuadi Waduhenu.
For more information, call Kathyrn Hall at 916-284-6330 or Bill
Camp at 916-927-9772.
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