Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Medical team makes deep impact in Honduras
By: Melissa Lilley
July 2010

EL TABLON, HONDURAS – She tried to wipe her face with her cream colored blouse but the tears kept coming. She sat sideways in the white plastic chair to face Larry Doyle, who held her hand and prayed with her while she waited with her grandchildren for their medicine. She is a Christian, but her son, who is dying of cancer, is not. Larry blinked away a few tears himself after their prayer.
One by one families came through the doors of Iglesia Bautista Restauracion and waited in line to see the doctor. Some walked miles to get to the free clinic. Some children enjoyed saying "ah" for the doctor and having him listen to their heartbeat. Others, like Jared, seemed frightened at all the excitement. Jared buried his head in his mom's shoulder and she held his shirt up while the doctor pressed the stethoscope against his back.

Respiratory problems are one of the most common reasons people came to the clinic. Many came to be treated for illnesses caused by parasites, which come from Hondurans not having access to clean drinking water. In Honduras, a country of 6.6 million and one of the poorest in the Western Hemisphere, 80 percent of illnesses could be prevented if clean drinking water was accessible. Nearly 1.1 billion in the world do not have clean drinking water and about 2 million children suffer each year with water-related diarrhea. According to the World Health Organization, one quarter of the world's population lives in developing countries with water shortages.

Doyle and the Deep Impact team did their best to comfort. One member rubbed a little girl’s back as she sat in her mother's lap and tried to receive a breathing treatment through a nebulizer. She gently waved the tube back and forth under the girl’s nose so she could inhale the medicine, trying to help soothe her and end her screaming and squirming. Doyle moved around the room, talking with those in line and helping explain how to take their medication.

The free medical clinic is one of six mission projects carried out by Deep Impact participants in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. High school and college students and youth leaders from across North Carolina spent a week in July ministering in rural areas in the country's capital city. Deep Impact began 13 years ago at the North Carolina Baptist Assembly at Fort Caswell in Brunswick County, and in Tegucigalpa. This is the third year Deep Impact expanded to include camp weeks at other locations. Deep Impact was also held in Red Springs, Greensboro, Shelby, Fruitland and Eastern Canada.

Doyle, who is a former missionary in Ecuador and now Director of Missions for Piedmont Baptist Association, has been to Honduras with Deep Impact several times, helping build the very church where the clinic was held. He and his wife also served as on-site coordinators for NC Baptist Men the year following Hurricane Mitch. Over the years Doyle has built relationships with national believers in Honduras, one being Benjamin, the pastor of Restauracion. Doyle said Benjamin shared with him how the clinic gave him opportunity to get to know the people in his community.

The church's evangelism coordinator, Rosa, certainly took advantage of the clinic. Thursday was the largest turnout with 157 patients, and Rosa shared the Gospel several times that day with the group as they waited to see the doctor. As evangelism director Rosa gets the congregation out in the community, going home to home in order to get to know people and share the Gospel. "This clinic lets people know we care about them," she said.

Rosa enjoys going home to home because "you really find out about people." Nineteen years ago, in the midst of a family crisis, Rosa came to know Jesus Christ as her personal Lord and Savior. Now, she is investing in reaching out to others.
The Deep Impact team reached out to share the Gospel and to provide physical care that at times seemed too easy. The doctors prescribed over-the-counter cough medicine and vitamins. Or pain reliever for a woman who complained of shoulder pain that shot through her body when she bent over to scrub her clothes. For the people living in the village of El Tablon, nothing is as easy as it should be. They don't run over to the pharmacy for basic items to treat a cough or an ear infection because most can’t afford it. It's hard to avoid water-borne disease when all the laundry, bathing and drinking water is contaminated.

Rob Williams remembers the first time he saw parasites on someone's skin. Williams, a physician's assistant from Faith Baptist Church, came to Honduras in 2001 and worked in the medical clinic. Williams has learned to treat things he doesn’t see in his office, such as parasites and scorpion stings. "I came back this year for the same reason I came on the first trip," he said. "I am reminded that God has blessed me far beyond what I deserve."

Williams worked alongside Dr. Antonio, a Honduran doctor who has worked in years past with North Carolina Baptists. Dr. Antonio lives in Tegucigalpa and decided to become a doctor when he saw so many people hurting in his city. "They broke my heart," he said. "I had to do something."

One couple came back later in the week to get medicine for their son who has Hepatitis. Doyle got to pray with the couple and when he finished, the dad was in tears. "I knew he was hurting," Doyle said. Doyle shared the Gospel and the boy's parents prayed to receive Jesus Christ as their personal Lord and Savior.
For the people Deep Impact ministered to through the medical clinic, little "somethings" added up to something big.

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