Two doctors sit in a
medical office across from Community
Memorial
Hospital pouring through snapshots
of a recent visit to a clinic in
Honduras. Each photo elicits a
smile. Some bring
laughter.
“Remember that day?” asks
Dr. David Perlmutter, a semi-retired
family practitioner. As
he points to a photo of a long line of villagers, Dr. Fran Larsen, a
family practitioner, recalls, “I think we saw 60 people that
day.”
On a typical day, Dr.
Larsen and Dr. Perlmutter are
providing care to their Ventura patients, but much of
their free time is dedicated to helping the efforts of a free clinic
in a remote island village in
Honduras.
The Glendafae Woods Humanitarian Clinic on
Roatan
Island,
Honduras opened in the fall of
2002. The brainchild of
a registered nurse born and raised there, the clinic brings healthcare services to a small economically
depressed island town off the Honduran
coast, just miles from a wealthy West
End tourist locale. With a population of 30,000
people, Coxen Hole and the surrounding
areas are home to half of Roatan
Island’s total population. Glendafae watched as her community, made up
of approximately 50% Hispanic and 50% black, succumbed to the
ravages of hypertension and
diabetes. Determined to
open a free clinic, Glendafae leveraged credit cards and personal
savings to build a clinic and a small 5-bedroom facility to house
visiting doctors on her family’s land.
Without treatment, there is
a high mortality rate among those with hypertension and diabetes. “With treatment, you can
improve lives,” remarks Dr. Larsen, who first visited the island
with a plastic surgeon five years ago. He found the island
beautiful and decided to stay on for a brief vacation. Since then, he has returned
to Roatan with a team of doctors, a
translator and a dentist once or twice a year for a week or two at a
time to volunteer at the clinic.
While there, they work
side-by-side with the clinic’s Honduran doctor and Glendafae herself, who serves as the
clinic’s nurse. Since
there is no bus service to the more remote parts of the island, the
doctors will take the clinic on the road and set-up for a day in
someone’s house, where as many as 60 people will be waiting to see
them.
The clinic also serves as a
pharmacy, with a full supply of donated medications administered
free to patients who agree to adhere to routine monitoring. Dr. Larsen, in cooperation
with Community
Memorial
Hospital, purchases medications
here and then gets them to the clinic. Organizations such as Direct
Relief International and pharmaceutical companies such as Schering Plough, also provide
assistance.
To ensure the clinic
continues to actively operate on a full-time basis year-round, other
volunteer teams visit the clinic. Coordinating the teams isn’t easy, but according to Dr. Perlmutter, who has given much of his last
30 years to third world medicine, “Word of mouth gets around pretty
rapidly,” and keeps the doctors coming year after year.
“It’s
so rewarding,” says Dr. Larsen.