medical health missions

Connecting Communities

Since our founding in 1998, Healing Art Missions (HAM) has been based in the small village of Granville in Central Ohio. It’s not often that here in Granville we simultaneously share a common disaster with the communities we partner with in Haiti. The Novel Corona Virus Pandemic has become the exception. 

This past March, when the pandemic began shutting down the U.S., HAM’s U.S. leadership went into isolation in Granville. We cancelled all travel plans in and out of the U.S., and turned our attention to helping our Haitian leadership, and the communities we serve, prepare for the inevitable coming disaster. First, with staff in Haiti, we studied the evolving realities of COVID-19, so we could strategize on the best ways to educate the community on prevention. Equally important was building a stock of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), something we all learned was a major problem right here in the U.S. 

Our home community of Granville responded in their own way to the shortage of PPE for local health care workers.  Friend and neighbor, Cara Harasaki, a doctor at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, began working with another neighbor, Sarah Marks, a senior director of women’s wear at Abercrombie & Fitch, to address the problem. Together they formed a grass-roots group, to design and make PPE for healthcare workers across the state, calling the project Ohio Save a Hero. With materials and other resources donated by Columbus Industries, Kaiser Aluminum, Dublin City Schools, Past Foundation, Metrobots, volunteers under the leadership of from Granville community member, Susan King, and the local Owens Corning campus got to work.  Cara, Sarah, and Susan rounded up hundreds of volunteers and together they created 2,118 face shields, 1,500 3-D printed reusable masks with changeable filters, and 2,500 protective gowns. 

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The project distributed PPE in 20 Ohio Counties, to local EMTs and hospitals, as well as EMS first responders in rural areas and some skilled nursing facilities. And, as is often the case when communities come together in times of crisis, they reached out to other communities needing help. In this case it was to Healing Art Missions to supply our programs in Haiti. Once the bulk of the PPE had been distributed in Ohio, there were a few face shields and face masks remaining, which Ohio Save a Hero offered to HAM, if we could get the equipment to Haiti. 

HAM has been actively working on that logistical bit of the process, shipping PPE to Haiti, since March.  It has been an expensive and inconsistently successful endeavor. Without going into the frustrating details, we are happy to report all the facemasks and face shields have arrived safely and are being used daily by the Dumay clinic staff.  We received enough reusable face masks to be able to share the bounty, by sending 77 masks to St. Damien’s pediatric hospital in Tabarre, Haiti. 

It has always been our philosophy at HAM that we can accomplish so much more when we partner with like-minded individuals and communities. As it says in HAM’s Mission Statement, “We are committed to fostering the dignity of the individual, respecting the ways of the community…” It is especially gratifying to directly connect the communities where we work with the community where we live, 1600 miles apart. 

Optometrist Opportunity

Healing Art Missions (HAM), a 501 (c) medical organization working in Haiti since 1999, is looking for an optometrist interested in joining at least one of our medical mission trips to Haiti annually. HAM funds and oversees a Haitian staffed primary care medical clinic in Dumay, Haiti, a subsistence farming community of 20,000 outside of Port-au-Prince. Along with doctor visits, a pharmacy, laboratory, vaccine clinics and clean water programs, we have an eye clinic with a trained eye technician who sees patients one week per month and a Haitian ophthalmologist who sees patients one day per month. Annually in January, a surgical team visits the clinic to perform cataract surgeries in our clinic surgical facility that includes an operating microscope.

 

HAM seeks an optometrist who can help oversee the eye clinic. Responsibilities would include: oversight and additional training of the Haitian eye technician, assessing current clinic eye equipment and helping plan for supplemental and replacement equipment, helping determine proper eye glasses inventory and eye medications for the clinic, seeing patients and working with the Haitian ophthalmologist and the U.S. based surgical team to determine the best options for treatment, working with suppliers of eye medications, glasses and eye equipment to identify and take advantage of programs that support such humanitarian eye programs as ours.

 

HAM’s Dumay eye clinic is currently stocked with the following equipment; autorefractor, tonopen, trial lens set and trial frame, Welsh Allen direct ophthalmoscope, Heine BIO, 20D lens 78D lens, Visual acuity charts.

 

Contact Dr Janine Flood, OD at floodmjk@roadrunner.com or healingartmissions@gmail.com if interested in this unique and important opportunity.