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Guyanese President Bharrat Jagdeo greets
sailors aboard the USS Kearsarge during its
humanitarian mission to the region. | |
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Washington — The USS Kearsarge has completed a swing
through Latin America and the Caribbean during which it offered
various types of humanitarian assistance, including an unanticipated
stop in Haiti to provide relief after devastating storms swept
through. (See “
U.S.
Provides $19.5 Million to Help Haiti Recover from Storms.”)
During the ship’s last stop, in Guyana, a Navy ophthalmologist
operated aboard the ship on a 3-year-old girl who could
barely see through fused eyelids. The operation gave the
girl —Theresa Pasud — the gift of full sight,
which was a joy for her and her family.
Through November, when the Kearsarge completed its mission,
ophthalmologists were kept busy doing cataract surgery onboard
and carrying out eye tests and providing eyeglasses ashore.
Dental cleaning and tooth repairs and extractions were
also in great demand. The Guyana Ministry of Health helped
identify the needs and priorities for care, and the Guyana
Defense Force provided support.
Helicopters aboard the Kearsarge were able to fly medics
and supplies deep into Guyana’s interior. One village
chief told The Stabroek News she appreciated the medical
help, which isn’t available in the immediate vicinity.
Chief Genevieve Rufino said most of the people around her
cannot afford to travel to the coast or to the capital to
attend to their health care needs.
The Houston (Guyana) Community High School benefited from
visiting engineers from the Kearsarge who renovated classrooms,
staff rooms and the library.
The crew of the Kearsarge and other participants from Canada,
Brazil, France, Colombia, Nicaragua, Trinidad and Tobago,
Guyana, the Dominican Republic and the Netherlands worked
together for the mission, known as “Continuing Promise
2008.”
Guyanese President Bharrat Jagdeo visited the Kearsarge
during its two-week mission to his country. He expressed
his gratitude for the health care his citizens received
— the ship’s commander said 4,000 patients were
treated in Guyana — and said he thought considerable
training and collaboration occurred during the mission.
A transition occurred during the overall effort, Navy Commodore
Fernandez “Frank” Ponds said. At first participants
knew little about each other’s cultures and home countries,
but later they came to know each other very well.
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A Trinidad man is fitted with glasses by
a Navy optometrist aboard the USS Kearsarge. | |
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Guyana was only the last stop in the Kearsarge’s
recent journey. Doctors carried out 221 surgeries, including
one to correct the vision of twin boys from the Dominican
Republic, and 198,000 medical, dental and eye checks. Over
a 13-week period, the amphibious ship’s medical team
treated 47,000 patients in the region and dispensed 81,300
prescriptions.
The animal kingdom was not left out during missions to
Guyana, the Dominican Republic, Colombia, Nicaragua and
Trinidad and Tobago: Veterinary care was provided to 5,600
animals.
Meanwhile, engineers built three schools during the Kearsarge
tour and renovated 10 parks or community centers. They also
conducted renovation projects at schools, clinics and hospitals
and completed five infrastructure projects.
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During the five-nation visit, the Navy’s Project
Handclasp distributed $275,000 worth of hospital furniture,
medical supplies, books and clothing to the Guyana Ministry
of Health.
During the ship’s stop in Nicaragua, surgeons from
Operation Smile, an international nonprofit that helps children
born with facial deformities, carried out nearly two dozen
surgeries to correct cleft lips and cleft palates. (See
“U.S.-Based
Operation Smile Brings Hope to Children Around the World.”)
Ponds said his crew, the international military medical
professionals and the specialists with organizations like
Operation Smile and Project Hope broke many cultural, language
and government barriers during their journey to reach out
“to our neighbors in Central and South America and
the Caribbean in a gesture of good will and friendship.”
The bonds formed during the multination voyage will grow
stronger, he predicted, with future missions that will be
based on initial lessons gained from this three-month-plus
journey.
The pediatricians, surgeons, engineers, anesthesiologists,
veterinarians and others may have represented different
countries, branches of military service and charities, but
Ponds said they worked together seamlessly, each providing
a unique skill, “to make this deployment a tremendous
success.”
The Kearsarge mission, which was under the operational
command of the U.S. Fourth Fleet, is part of the Navy’s
new maritime strategy to pursue projects of common interest.
For more information about the mission, see “Humanitarian
Mission Brings Health Care to Caribbean Countries.”
A video
clip of the crew’s work in Guyana is available
on the U.S. Navy’s Web site.
The USS Boxer conducted a similar mission in the summer
of 2008. See “U.S.
Naval Ship Completes Humanitarian Mission to Three Countries.”
The USS Comfort traveled to the region in 2007. See “Panama’s
Health Services Aided by U.S. Biomedical Technicians.”