As
of today (Wednesday), we have completed 89 surgeries and screened 134 patients. It has been
five busy days filled with incredible moments and people.
I
have seen many older patients arrive for screening; patients who have lived 25,
45, 60 years with their cleft. The infants are innocent. The brutality of the
world has not yet impacted them and they are unaware of the deformity they have
been born with. They laugh, play, and giggle like any child, free from the
knowledge that they are different.
As
age increases, so does the impact of the harsh world we live in. Some patients
as young as 4 years old are aware that they are different and enter screening
shy and apprehensive. As the week progresses, they open up in the presence of
other children with clefts and their personalities shine through.
Many
older patients are reserved and quiet. Some cover their clefts with scarves.
The language difference is more pronounced as we cannot communicate as
efficiently through play as we do with the smaller children. A smile truly is
the only language we all have in common. A simple smile goes a long way in
making a connection with patients. The older patients befriend each other,
oftentimes the first people they have seen that look just like them. It is
common to find these patients playing cards and hanging out in the shelter. In
the postoperative ward, many of the older patients continuously express their
gratitude to the nurses, surgeons, and the student volunteers.
Lakshmi,
a 45-year-old man, quickly won over the hearts of the volunteers. He was shy
and nervous throughout screening and hobbled from station to station, a
deformed foot hindering him. He was the first older patient to come through
screening and everyone was eager to know his story. We discovered his
intriguing story when Archna, the local programs coordinator saw him.
Archna
spends months recruiting patients to come to the missions. She helps set up
partnerships with district government accredited health activists whose
relationships with local villagers enables them to spread the word efficiently
about Operation Smile.
It
was on a recruiting mission to the district hospital in when Archna first met
Lakshmi. He had worked in a vegetable stand inside the Hospital grounds for
over thirty years, but it was not until Archna informed him of Operation Smile
that he realized that his cleft lip could be fixed. Lakshmi lived his entire
life thinking his cleft was permanent. When he heard the news he was skeptical
but Archna was able to convince him to travel to Bhubaneswar for the mission.
Lakshmi
never attended school, as he was the son of a poor subsistence farmer. He was
the only child in his area with a cleft and the children in his village teased
and mocked him endlessly and made his life miserable growing up. He found relief in the fields harvesting rice
with his father out of the view of his misunderstanding peers. Until her
boarded a bus to come to the mission site, Lakshmi had never traveled far from
his village. He traveled six hours by bus before arriving at the hospital.
Since
his arrival at the hospital his cheerful demeanor and big smile drew everyone
in. One day, I walked into the shelter, and Lakshmi had organized an impromptu
card game with the high school volunteers. When asked to take pictures he would
reply yes with a slight nod of his head and smile. Lakshmi was scheduled for
surgery at the end of the day and did not complain once about his thirst or
hunger. He waited patiently for his turn for surgery and smiled hugely when we
dressed him in a boa and sunglasses.
After a mini photo shoot he asked for a picture of himself. We
remembered that the medical records volunteer had brought a Polaroid camera on
the mission and ran to get it. His excitement over receiving the picture was
priceless and he clutched it to his chest tightly. When his time came for
surgery, he stood up confidently and walked into the operating room. The
following day in post-op he perked up when he saw us and gave us a high five.
Each
year in India, approximately 35,000 children are born with a cleft deformity;
1,500 in the state of Odisha, where this mission took place. Additionally,
there is an estimated 20,000-person backlog of cleft patients in this region.
This week we saw patients of all ages, including numerous older patients, which
is uncommon. Operation Smile began working in Odisha a year and a half ago and
will determinately reduce the number of people living with clefts here in
the years to come and change hundreds of lives like Lakshmi’s.
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| Lakshmi |