Mission trips well-equipped
Sunday, March 28, 2010
(Updated 1:13 am)
Accompanying Photos
Peggy Longmire
(News & Record)
Photo Caption:
Dr. David Sillmon and his daughter, Sandy
Cook, serving with Dream Ministries in the Dominican Republic, were 70
miles from the epicenter of the Haitian earthquake.
Retired Greensboro physician David Sillmon's ninth trip to the
Dominican Republic was different from any of his other trips to serve
medically with Dream Ministries at the Good Samaritan Clinic.
This was my hardest mission trip, Sillmon said, because of the
major earthquake which struck Haiti and the aftermath of the quake.
He was with his daughter, Sandy Cook, a Durham pharmacist, who has
accompanied her dad on six other medical mission trips to the Dominican
Republic.
They were out for a brisk evening power walk when Cook turned to her
dad and asked, Did you feel it?
At that time, they did not know what had happened or that they were
only 70 miles away from the epicenter of a 7.0-magnitude earthquake that
would later be described as the strongest one in the area of Haiti
since 1770. Nor did they know that possibly 3 million people would need
medical help after the quake.
Returning to the village, they were warned about the major earthquake
and the staggering numbers of victims who would need medical help. When we learned the extent of the disaster, Sillmon said, we were
sure we would be involved but did not know how much.
They called their loved ones in the U.S. to assure them they were
safe, although a tsunami warning had been issued for their coastal
village.
Sillmon believes the Dream Ministries were fortunate and privileged
to be where they were to help earthquake victims who were slowly brought
over rough roads and terrain from Haiti to The Good Samaritan Clinic in
the Dominican Republic.
This clinic is the main outreach program of the Volunteers in Mission
Medical Committee of the Western North Carolina Conference of the
United Methodist Church.
Beginning as a dream in 2000, the clinic has been fully functional
and growing since 2002.
The clinic was built primarily to serve the medical needs of an
impoverished rural community of 1,200 people.
Staffed with a full-time physician and health care support staff, the
clinic now sees more than 120 patients a week.
Sillmon and his medical mission team are part of three medical teams
that go to the Dominican Republic each year.
The teams first trip was in 2002. Sillmon was one of 15 members of
the surgical/building team who went to the city of Barahona and began
ministering to the people who needed health care there and in
surrounding villages.
In 2010, 110 to 120 physicians, surgeons, nurses and other medical
personnel paid their own air expenses to go and help these less
fortunate people. The cost of medical supplies brought or shipped to the area is paid
for by Dream Ministries. Upon leaving the Dominican Republic, all
supplies and medical instruments are left to be used by local physicians
and health care support staff at the clinic.
Sillmon and his medical team usually spend one day seeing patients at
the Good Samaritan Clinic, then they see more patients in other small
villages, called bateys.
I believe Sandy and I will continue to go each year to help the
people in this region as long as we can breathe, Sillmon said. Only
Sandy's work schedule and my health will keep us away, he said.
I know it is trite to say, but we do get more than we give.
Can you imagine spending a week working side by side with your adult
daughter? Sillmon said. That's one of the reasons I love to go.
Dream Ministries plans to continue sending three medical teams each
year to the Dominican Republic, along with support and building teams as
needed.
Sillmon believes that perhaps even more important than the three
trips will be the continued financial support of the Good Samaritan
Clinic.
A donation of $100 covers one day's total clinic costs, including the
salaries of the health care providers, all medications and supplies for
the patients and other operating costs of the clinic.
The recent disaster in Haiti has already increased the clinic's
patient load. Haitians from Port au Prince, with no home to which they
may return, are now moving into the homes of relatives in the bateys.
They continue to need medical care.
During Sillmon's trip in January, 88 surgical procedures were done by
the medical team, 650 patients were seen, and 2,100 prescriptions were
written.
When Cook recently told a group of her experiences in the Dominican
Republic and with victims of the earthquake, she read a poem titled I
Learned I Will Never Be the Same.
In part it said: I learned God is fluent in every language. I
learned why I need reminding from time to time that I am such a small
part of a bigger picture and God is the painter.
Like her father, Cook has great faith and a commitment to helping
others. I learned that God does not always call the well-equipped, she
said, but he does well equip those that he calls.
Want to help?
To make a
tax-deductible contribution to Adopt A Clinic Day Program, Good
Samaritan Clinic, Dominican Republic, checks may be mailed to:
Western
North Carolina Conference Treasurer, P.O. Box 18005, Charlotte, NC
28218
To suggest a person or organization that is �Making a Difference�
in Guilford County, contact Peggy Longmire at rlongmire@triad.rr.com or
288-9040.