IDP outreach of DHI with the Preventive Dentistry Department of Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH)

It was a sun-filled day.

Trainee dentists of the Preventive Dentistry Department of Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) and volunteers filled the settlement with equipment.

Some members of Doctors Health Initiative ( DHI) were overseeing the project to make sure things started off smoothly. 

The internally displaced women, children and men looked eagerly upon what was being offered. There were kids wailing at their already tired mothers. 

As food was provided, their wails surprisingly began ceasing.

Cheerfully, women began to relax as their teeth were being taken care of by student doctors.

They conversed with their peers and smiled more.

The dentists could not have made any more impacts on these lives.

Work kept on, as more displaced persons came by to register and be attended to. 

It was a success!

 The dental care came to an end successfully and it was all I could inhale in the ambience… a feeling of being cared for from each smile of the displaced members. 

Thank you Preventive Dentistry Department of LUTH!!!

Thank you Doctors Health Initiative!!!

Written by Nkechi Ikoh

-DHI Approved

Who Are We?

Who am I? I’m just a teenage girl with hopes, dreams and aspirations for myself and the world. Just a girl who believes in love, equality and peace. Just a girl with many flaws, yet many strengths. I’m just a girl who has somehow been lucky enough to have an education, clothing on my back, a place to come home to and many other gifts not everyone is blessed with.
Who are they? They are men, women and children ripped from their homes and families. They are mothers, fathers, brothers and sisters. They mean everything to some yet nothing to others. They have seen, experienced and felt things many of us could never imagine, yet smile like most of us never have. They are people just like everyone, who deserve to love and be loved. They are Internally Displaced Persons, living in camps and praying for a better tomorrow.

 

Who are we? We are human beings with beating hearts, capable of influencing and changing lives. We are capable of leaping, falling, succeeding, failing, crying, smiling and so much more.

 

We have the ability to speak up against injustice and help those who need it. When we are capable of so much, why are we doing so little? When we are capable of loving, why do so many of of us choose to hate? When we all have so many gifts to give this world, why do we refuse to? So once again, I ask, who are we? We are who we choose to be, kind or unkind. We can choose to change someone with a smile. We can choose to change someone with a hug. We can choose to change someone with a conversation. We can choose to change and influence someone or multitudes of people by giving our time.

 

We all have the choice, may we make the right one.

Written by Fatima Musa

-DHI Approved

Throwback To A Little While Ago

On 10th December, members and volunteers of Doctors Health Initiative once again reached out to the  *IDPs that live in the **Eleko beach area. It was a great experience. On arrival we saw a long queue of women waiting to be seen by the team from St. Kizito Hospital who partnered with DHI to provide gynaecological care to the women. The women were all smiling and did not mind the heat nor the slightly lengthy wait. Looking around I saw a good number of the children looking with anticipation at the volunteers. Tolu gathered them and taught them some games. Soon the venue was ringing with the high pitch laughter of excited children at play. Watching the children play with so much excitement as if there was no tomorrow was an unforgettable experience.

 

 

ring-around

Soon our own doctors were all settled and ready to start seeing patients. Dr. Erere Otrofanowei, consultant Dermatologist and Dr. Ugwu, paediatircian were greatly in high demand. Mothers and children all seeking medical attention crowded their tables. We were hard put to maintain order. Thanks to Dr. Erere’s strategic input we achieved some order and calm. Our nurses Osariemwen, Gloria and Patrick were a big help in maintaining order. The Pharmacy was manned by Sharon, Patrick and Cynthia. And of course not forgetting the help of Francisca, Chisom, Nwanneka and Ginika who helped to oversee the weight and height measurements and taking pictures.
The climax of the outreach came with the handing over of bags of rice to each family. A couple (who wishes to remain anonymous) and their friends had donated these bags of rice in the spirit of Christmas. The faces of the IDPs were a joy to behold. They lined up again in order to collect the bags of rice being handed over family by family. Every family received at least a bag of rice.
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As we were departing, Mr. Mustafa and a group of the men who make up the community followed us to our bus and thanked us wholeheartedly. They prayed and asked for God’s blessings on us all. Dr. Erere thanked them on behalf of ***DHI and for trusting us enough to allow us into their community. She encouraged them to look for sustainable ways of generating income especially for the women and mothers.
Helping women know more about themselves and ways to stay healthy, experiencing the friendly atmosphere in which they coexist, but most of all not forgetting the happiness that showed and their words of appreciation as a result of our efforts. I feel that a whole lot was gained from this outreach

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Written by Chisom Ofoma  and  Nkechi Asogwa
*Internally Displaced Persons
**A beach in Lagos State, Nigeria.
***Doctors Health Initiative
-DHI Approved

Season’s Greetings

Merry Christmas from everyone at the Doctors Health Initiative.

In the spirit of the season, we have a treat for you all.

Please visit the link below to view it.

Also, we would greatly appreciate it if you tell us what you think by commenting.

We are very grateful for your continuous support.

We hope you have a great day!

Love,

DHI.

 

 

 

Yet Another One

Finally! Six weeks of fundraising through letter writing, social media bombarding, one-on-one soliciting, email campaigning, etc. coupled with a mountain of preparations for materials, refreshments and all manner of logistics was at an end. The day had dawned for *DHI’s dental outreach in conjunction with the Community Dentistry Unit, **LUTH. All for the Internally Displaced People along Ibeju Lekki axis of Lagos State.

Christy and I arrived first and quickly began registering the 30+ women and children already waiting. It was quite amusing to see their confused faces when we explained that we would only be dealing with their teeth that day. This of course was resolved when we reminded them we would be returning on Saturday for the general medical check up.

Inside the treatment area, as minor adjustments were being made to the arrangement of the chairs, a 30-seater bus with College of Medicine, LUTH on it, sped past. That driver was quite confident for someone who had never been in the area we jokingly exclaimed. Calling the doctors who were in another 30-seater bus behind, we found their driver was prudent but had been misled by his okada outrider who had led him in the opposite direction.

Eventually, the comedy of errors was resolved and the 63-man contingent of dentists, dental students and dental nurses, arrived at the outreach venue , disembarked from both buses and quickly set to work. Not long after, the rest of the DHI volunteers arrived to lend a hand. Women were registered along with their children to facilitate history taking and examination of their children and themselves. The men hung back, most perched along the road on their okadas, their new occupations in this land of exile. On getting to the dentists, questionnaires were used to collect data and record findings before each client moved to another section for cleaning and dental treatments.

Working quickly and professionally, the dentists worked steadily for 4 hours, seeing about 140 people in total. A far cry from the 300 people we had been told lived in the community but still a sizeable number of victims torn from their ancestral homes and sources of livelihood. However, their smiles and gratitude for the exercise made all the work worth it.

After pictures were taken and refreshments served, our efficient technical partners raced back to the Mainland, hoping to beat the legendary Lekki traffic at Ajah.

Full of gratitude for the opportunity to serve, our 6-man team bid our brethren goodbye and likewise, journeyed home.

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Written by Dr. Obi Ideh

Contact: obideh@gmail.com

*Doctors Health Initiative

**Lagos University Teaching Hospital

-DHI Approved