This post is reblogged from "Through My Porthole". What a joy for this teen!
Learning to work with an interpreter is just one of many steep and entertaining learning curves I’ve encountered since being in Madagascar with Mercy Ships. Here’s a glimpse of the communications team in action with Ronaldo who ‘dodged a bullet’ thanks to his dental appointment. His is story is below.
The morning sun is already hot, and the lines of
people waiting to have their dental problems relieved are long. In the
island-nation of Madagascar, dental care is expensive and beyond the
reach of most. Outside the local hospital gates, 17-year-old Ronaldo
stands with the men, waiting in a line to be examined by the Mercy Ships
dental team. Next to them stretches a restless queue of children of all
ages accompanied by their mothers. In the final column, the women
patients stand beneath the shade of their colourful umbrellas. From the
crowd of approximately 300, about 65 hopefuls will receive dental care
today. The rest with treatable conditions are given coloured wristbands
for dental appointments on following days.
Every eye is on the handful of little yellow appointment cards held
by dental team supervisor Robbie Lerma as she begins screening and
selecting patients. She randomly stops at one line and then another,
examining patients here and there. Her seemingly haphazard selection
makes it pointless for people in line to ‘save a place’ for someone
else. The result is that each person waiting has an equal opportunity to
receive dental care. Balancing these kinds of factors requires God’s
daily wisdom when faced with so many in need.
Ronaldo lingers in line with his schoolbag slung over his shoulder,
hoping for an appointment ticket and the opportunity for serious decay
around and between his front teeth to be treated without charge. He
explains, “I have a sister who came here before. She said, ‘Go there if
you want to fix your teeth.’ So I came to see what they can do. I
thought my front teeth would fall out. I don’t have money to spend at a
dentist. Thanks to God I’ve been received. I did not expect it because
it was a long line, and I was at the end.”
When asked what caused the cavities in his teeth, Ronaldo replies, “I
don’t really know, but one of my friends said it’s because I’m drinking
really hot water and, after that, really cold water. I often do that.”
Ronaldo no longer feels pain in his front teeth, so he does not realise
that his health is a ticking time-bomb. He is just concerned about
preserving his fabulous smile.
After receiving his numbered appointment card, Ronaldo strolls into
the Mercy Ships purpose-renovated dental clinic within the Malagasy
hospital. He is examined by lead dentist Saulo Gamarra Gonzales who is
pleased that Mercy Ships gives quality dental care to the poor. “I will
treat these patients the same way I would treat my patients at home,” he
declares.
Dr. Gamarra explains the seriousness of Ronaldo’s condition to him.
Decay has eaten away at his front teeth’s enamel and caused a major
infection to spread from the damaged nerve. As a result, there is now a
fistula or split in his gum above the affected tooth. It requires
immediate intervention. After considering Ronaldo’s age, the dentist
decides to perform a root canal to save his front tooth from extraction.
He will also fill the other cavities.
Antibiotics to control the severe infection accompanied the dental
work, and Ronaldo got the result he really hoped for – the restoration
of his engaging grin.
He is graduating from high school soon, and Ronaldo hopes for a
career in Customs and Immigration. He has leadership ambitions, and he
really feared entering his adulthood and future profession with his
front teeth missing. “I’m not going to lose my teeth when I’m older!
Thanks for helping us in need!” he said.
The delighted Ronaldo gives a relived laugh and scrutinises his
stunning smile from all angles in the dental clinic mirror. “My teeth
are not bad! I can smile with people, and the girls like it!”
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