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St.
Andrew's Children's Clinic Volunteers
With 200+ patients at each monthly Clinic, many volunteers
are needed. Health services volunteers see patients in these
departments: audiology, cardiology, counseling, dermatology,
feeding disorders, nutrition, occupational therapy, orthotics,
orthopedics, rolfing, pediatrics, physical therapy, psychology,
sign and vision, and speech therapy. Volunteer specialists fit
crippled children with special shoes, wheelchairs, strollers,
and walkers.
Other volunteers interpret, fix lunch and a morning snack for
patients and their parents, sort and bag food and clothing for
distribution, or drive vans to and from the border, the hospital
for tests, and the pharmacy for prescriptions. Other volunteers
lead tours or do whatever needs to be done.
From left to right:
Sonia Urvizo, Raul Camarena, Eduardo Vasquez & Luis
Armando Moreno Castillo, kitchen volunteers
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They are true companeros, this Santa Ana,
Sonora foursome that comes on the donated DIF bus with
patients from Imuris and Magdalena.
Great jokers, they also sweat all morning over the outdoor
grill so volunteers may fuel themselves midday with delicioso
beef and chicken corn tacos. Eduardo has volunteered for
six years and the others for two, all serving with DIF,
Desarollo Integral de la Familia, a social agency. (Translator
was Anabel Felix, Rio Rico, on her first assignment.) |
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just like to help people,” the team agreed.” |
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Lynne Albright, EDD, Teacher of the Visually
Impaired
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The Vision area is where Lynne, of Tucson, heads on
clinic day. Four years ago, after spotting blind children
on a video at an Episcopalian convention, she toured the
clinic.
Lynne schedules volunteers including doctors and nurses,
keeps the patient database, orders materials and consults
about referrals. But the real payoff is educating families
and seeing children do well. |
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is probably the most exciting thing I've ever done.
The families are dedicated, and so grateful for what we
do.” |
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Cheyenne MacMasters, Reiki Master Teacher
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Near the swirl of physical and occupational therapy,
Cheyenne calms crying and clenching youngsters through
the ancient practice of Reiki (“ray-key”).
To relax them for therapy workouts, she and aides use
ELF (extremely low frequency) energy in their hands and
fingers to absorb their patients’ tension.
Cheyenne, of Bisbee, toured the clinic in January 2004
and found herself calming crying children. She began her
volunteer service the very next month. |
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“I
enjoy helping the kids relax during their visits. I just
love coming here.” |
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Andru McGahey, M.D. & Carol Lyons, R.N.
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They’re in the explanation business. Andru,
who began volunteering four years ago, directs the Pharmacy
area near the exit. Owner of the San Andres Pharmacy in
Nogales, Sonora, he saves the clinic thousands of dollars
by getting lower prices and free samples.
Carol, Green Valley, has brought family practice expertise
to the clinic for over three years. She maintains records,
banishes old medicines, checks that prescriptions are
appropriate, even keeps a Red Box for clinic day emergencies.
Very important, the team ensures that Mexican prescriptions
match their U.S. counterparts. |
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“We’re
a ‘gate’ in the waiting room,
a good spot where we can educate families about their
medicines,” said Dr. McGahey. |
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Left to Right:
Clare Alvarez, Clary Diwik, Gina Santos, Carondelet
Health Network Speech Pathologists
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On clinic day, the smiling staff in the Cleft Palate/Hearing
Loss/Speech Delay & Language area makes a difference
for anxious children.
Spanish-speaking Tucsonans Gina, a clinic veteran of
two and a half years, Clare, with a year of service, and
Clary, with 6 months, also show the families how to take
therapy techniques home. They work closely with clinic
areas such as Pediatrics and Nutrition to develop treatment
and family education plans. For surgeries, they assemble
patient information and later offer post-surgery therapy
with, again, the accent on family involvement.
Currently, they are learning a simplified sign language
to better communicate with hearing-loss patients. All
are with St. Mary¹s Hospital in Tucson, but Gina
is based at Holy Cross Hospital in Nogales, Arizona. |
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“We
learn as we teach, and we collaborate on almost every
case that comes to us,” said Clare. |
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