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| During this
year's mission, with the capable assistance of local
dentist, Dr. Daniel and his intern Gilbert, Dr. Williams was
able to do more instruction and management of the mission than
in previous years. Here Penny expands her skills by assisting
Charity in ultrasonic scaling of teeth. |
2008 saw our seventh
mission team for dentistry at Olmekenyu. Dr. Williams and his
wife, Sheila, lead the dental core that consisted of Charity
Ngambwa, RDH. and many lay team members with no formal dental
training but very trainable hearts. |
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| Gilbert, an
intern from Nairobi Dental College, is assisted by Charity
Ngambwa, a Kenyan native who practices in Florida as a dental
hygienist. |
Charity was an able dental assistant on
the mission. She had previously been a dental assistant before
becoming a dental hygienist. |
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| As a
third year dental student in a practical internship, Gilbert had
to perform a combination of extractions, fillings, and scalings
that totaled 500 during his time with Dr. Daniel. He achieved
most of his goal in the two weeks working with KMO. |
Jerry and Penny love
assisting Charity. Tyler, Sheila and Pam look on as they take a
well-earned break from the pharmacy / medical clinics work.
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| With our system for seeing as
many patients as possible in the short time we were in
Olmekenyu, Dr. Daniel would often numb patients and feed them
into the dental chairs where Gilbert and Dr. Williams would do
extractions or fillings. |
Gilberts expertise in achieving
anesthesia and extracting teeth increased over the period of
time we worked together. There is nothing like experience to
make a difference. |
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| Britney
Compton was a workhorse in sterilization, making the most with
the setup we had. She kept the instruments ready for use
all day long. |
Nursing student,
Crystal, who was also our former nurse Lillian's sister,
helped in the dental clinics our first day in Olmekenyu. |
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| Molly loved
dental assisting...from a nurses perspective. She got to see a
whole different side of medicine. |
Charity and Molly
looking to see why the water stopped on the scaler...the tank
needed to be refilled with water. |
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| Dr Williams
filling teeth in Olmekenyu. With so few dentists on the trip,
fillings are a luxury and do not typically take precedence
over extractions to remove infections and abscesses. |
Charity was a very accomplished
dental assistant and could easily assist in the restorative
procedures we completed in Olmekenyu on the hospital staff and
teachers from the various schools. |
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| Jerry and Dr. Daniel worked well
together. The yellow rain coated fellow was a fine translator
for our group this year in addition to being a photo hound! |
Gilbert
worked to do some fillings on the school teachers from the
town. |
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| An Olmekenyu mother has a cleft
palate baby that needed help in a serious way. |
A double cleft lip
and palate is one of the most serious of all facial genetic
deformities. |
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| Fortunately
Sheila has brought a backpack from Smile Train, a charitable
oral surgical group that raises funds and performs free surgical
correction of cleft lip and palate deformities in children all
over the world. In that back pack was a brochure that explained
the work that Smile Train does and has several before and after
photos of babies successfully treated for their cleft palates. |
In the photo above
and to the left, Charity is explaining to the baby's mother
about Smile Train and giving her hope that her baby could be
helped to live a normal life. Unfortunately,
the baby did not live long enough for the surgery to be
performed. Smile Train comes to Narok Hospital periodically
and we had hoped that the child could have been helped on
their next trip. |
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Historically, one out of
ten have indicated a decision to receive Christ as a direct result of seeing the "JESUS" film.
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The 10/40 Window is an area stretching from 10° to 40° north of the equator from West Africa to East Asia. Did you
know that 90 percent of all unreached people groups live in this region of the world? The 10/40
Window is identified as having less than 2 percent of their populations as evangelical Christians.
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More
Animals of the Masai Mara
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How
to Contribute
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Kenya Medical
Outreach, Inc.
A
non-profit,
cross-cultural, non-denominational mission-oriented
charity
that accepts prayer, time, monetary and in-kind donations from
individuals, foundations and corporations. |
For more
information or to send donations to continue God's work:
Email Dr. Bill
Williams
Mail Bill at
200 Johnson Road
Suwanee, GA 30024
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