Healing the Sickness, One Patient at a Time
by Dr. Jung Tsai March 1st 2008
Dr. Jung Tsai and his medical team just returned from a
humanitarian health mission trip to Haiti. Dr. Tsai is a vascular surgeon at
Trinitas Hospital and he is President of the North American Taiwanese Medical
Association which is comprised of approximately fifteen hundred dentists and
physicians of varying specialties. Since 2003, this association has provided
annual medical missions to the needy in various Caribbean nations. This year,
Dr. Tsai selected Haiti because there is a strong Haitian immigrant presence at
Trinitas hospital and in the Elizabeth, N.J. area.
The team, laden with medical supplies and equipment, left
Kennedy to land in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. On arrival they were greeted by the
Haitian Health Department, Foreign Ministry and television camera crews. Haiti
is perhaps the most destitute country in the western hemisphere largely due to
political unrest, consequently, the majority of Haitians fail to receive even
basic healthcare. During the five days that Dr. Tsai’s team was in Haiti, they
were able to provide medical and dental care and surgical procedures to
approximately fifteen hundred patients.
The team spent the first and second days in Port-au-Prince
treating basic maladies that are easily remedied in our country but go
untreated in Haiti; high blood pressure, skin diseases, infection, malnutrition
and diabetes. On the third and fourth days Dr. Tsai’s team relocated to a
countryside hospital in Port-au-Salut where the responsibility of medical care
was dependent on the efforts of only two physicians, neither of whom were
surgeons. Dr. Tsai established the operating room at the hospital and in
forty-eight hours performed 35 surgical procedures including operations on
various small tumors, hernia, hydrocele, parotid abscess, and fractures. At the
same time, the medical team, including Trinitas staff member, Dr. Michel-Ange
Ferdinand, and his wife, Joseline, provided two months medical supplies for
diabetes, high blood pressure, infections, and cardiac conditions.
The medical team returned home exhausted but satisfied from
the reward of helping people, changing lives and improving the community in
Haiti. Not only did our doctors and dentists heal the sick but more
importantly, provided hope and inspiration to the Haitian community, empowering
them through better health to make a better tomorrow for themselves.