Archive for the ‘Mongolia’ Category

Patagonia with Boundless Journeys

An Update From the Foundation for African Medicine & Education

By

Thursday, August 4th, 2011

A few years back a group of Boundless Journeys guests on our Tanzania: Migration Safari shared a special experience. They engaged in volunteer work at the Foundation for African Medicine & Education (FAME). FAME was created to improve the quality of medical care in East Africa, and it endeavors to help bridge the gap between a critically under-resourced healthcare system and first-world medicine. FAME is currently focused on improving the quality and accessibility of medical care in Tanzania and making a difference in the day-to-day lives of the Tanzanian people.

FAME has come quite far since Boundless Journeys guests first spent time there. The facilities they have created, and the scope of their work and the number of people they can now help is nothing short of miraculous. Here is an updated from their founders about some of their current projects that I would like to share:

Greetings from Karatu, Tanzania. The last few months have been very exciting for FAME. Our patient load at the clinic is growing by leaps and bounds. Our new diagnostic facility is off to a fantastic start. We are taking our mobile medical services deeper and deeper into the bush, where children have never been vaccinated let alone had access to medical care when they get sick. We hope these stories capture the spirit of our work over the last few months. Thanks for sharing the journey with us.

Outpatient Services at FAME Medical
Since January of this year, 5,261 patients have been cared for at FAME Medical. While we have seen fewer cases of malaria this past quarter, we continue to see endless numbers of patients suffering from acute respiratory infections and waterborne diseases. We are also beginning to see more diabetes, even Type I. We suspect many children with juvenile diabetes simply die in rural Tanzania due to limited access and resources. Needless to say, we are thrilled to see these little patients finding their way to our clinic on the hill, where they can receive the care they deserve. We have also seen our fair share of burns, snake bites, injuries and wounds over the last few months. Dr. Duane Koenig, a long-term FAME volunteer, had an immeasurable impact on our community during his six-month stay, during which we could rarely persuade him to take a day off. As a family practice doctor and general surgeon, he treated hundreds of patients at FAME Medical and on mobile clinic, saving the arm of one Maasai woman and the foot of another along the way. Dr. Duane worked tirelessly, alongside our Tanzanian nurses, recognizing from the start what the lives of these women would be like in a Maasai boma without two good hands and two good feet. Every day for weeks on end he debrided and dressed their wounds and gave antibiotic treatment until their infections healed and they were able to return home to their families.

Due to an outbreak of measles and whooping cough in the neighboring District of Ngorongoro, we’ve treated a number of Maasai patients suffering from these diseases as well. In fact, the District recently hosted a meeting for all clinicians where we learned that the National Vaccination Program for measles and polio will be rolled out in our District in October.

Dr. Ken Karanja recently joined our clinical team as well and is helping us keep pace with our growing patient population. We have also hired Monica Koillah, a Maasai nurse, who is serving as a translator for the many Maasai women coming to FAME Medical who do not speak Kiswahili.

FAME Mobile Medical
With the help of Malaria No More Netherlands, Rift Valley Children’s Village, and Mwangaza, 0ur Mobile Medical Team continues to spend roughly 10 days a month in the field, bringing medical care to those who would otherwise go without. In our new locations of Endesh and Gidamilanda, we are seeing patients primarily from the DaToga and Hadzabe tribes. Neither village has electricity, so we continue to run our laboratory via our solar powered mobile bus. The village of Endesh has no running water, so we bring our own water supply when we provide services there. Our health education program continues to incorporate a local drama troupe and educational DVD’s to convey important health messages. Patients are visibly engaged in learning, particularly the children. One of our biggest challenges is the road, particularly during the rains. Many of the roads turn into rivers in the days after a heavy rain. You can imagine how completely isolated and cut off the people of this region feel when a child is sick or a loved one injured. Our advance team makes every effort to make the roads passable for our mobile clinic bus. The District Medical Officer continues to insure that we are supplied with malaria drugs, as well as a government nurse to carry out the Mother Child Health program for pregnant women and children under five in the area. We also continue to spend two days every other week at Rift Valley Children’s Village, providing medical care for the 70+ children there as well as people from the surrounding village.

New Diagnostic Service
The new diagnostic facility at FAME Medical opened its doors to the community in April of this year. The generous support of the Izumi Foundation made this possible. Dr. Joyce Cuff, a Professor of Microbiology and Parasitology, is nearing the end of a one-year volunteer stay with FAME. She has made an incalculable contribution for which we will be eternally grateful. Between helping with the layout of the new lab, mentoring and teaching our Lab Team, and spending countless hours working along side Yusufu, Julius, and Josephat, she has taken our diagnostic service to a whole new level for the people of Karatu and greater Arusha region. She will be sorely missed but has forever left her mark on FAME Medical and our team.

FAME Volunteers
FAME has taken great pleasure in already hosting 22 volunteers in 2011. Our volunteers represent a variety of specialties and backgrounds, including pediatric infectious disease, neurology, cardiology, pediatrics, general surgery, internal medicine and family medicine. The exchange of medical information between our Tanzanian doctors and American physicians this year has been vital to the growth of experience and knowledge for everyone involved. A father daughter team from Washington DC recently spent time at FAME, he a cardiologist, she a pediatrician. They worked in tandem on our monthly mobile clinic in the bush. Together, they walked away knowing that they would be returning to FAME to volunteer when they again had the time. Back in the US for only a day, Dr. Reed was already coming up with ways he could help from abroad. Reed and Rachel remind of us of how lucky we are to have such giving, loving volunteers. Additionally, a mother daughter duo, Janet Hamilton and Emily Boone from Maine, did massive amounts of data entry for our lab in June, helping us to analyze trends with our patient populations. As we enter the latter part of 2011 and look to the future, we will need general surgeons, family practitioners, internal medicine and ER docs, pediatricians and OB/GYN’s. A retired hospital administrator keen to rough it volunteering in Africa for an extended stay would bring a smile to our faces as well.

TALES FROM THE BUSH
by Katie Williams, MD

Perhaps the most striking thing about working at FAME was the rhythm of the day. I woke up with the sun to the serenade of birds and other morning sounds. After a leisurely breakfast with my volunteer bungalow roommates, we walked around the hospital construction, through the red clay, to the clinic, arriving as the staff pulled in. Working side by side with Tanzanian providers, nurses, lab technicians and interpreters, I helped to take care of a range of patients with a multitude of problems in an efficient, cost-effective manner relying a great deal on clinical skills. It really did feel like the way medicine is meant to be practiced, unfettered by appointment schedules to follow, e-mails to return, insurance issues to deal with, prescriptions to refill. By the end of each clinic day, there was an unmistakable feeling of collective accomplishment, perhaps most profound during the busy days in the bush. Nights were short. After enjoying a prepared dinner, I crawled into bed, reading by flashlight so as not to use electricity, before falling asleep to the nighttime sounds of Africa.

It is hard to come up with a single word to describe the experience. It covered a range of emotions from inspiring, beautiful, and amazing to sad, upsetting, and desperate. I feel this reflects Tanzania, and the contrasts its tribal and western cultures hold. Returning to California has been jarring. We are so spoiled with lives made busy by self-imposed schedules and possessions. We have lost the rhythm of the day, rising and retiring with the sun. It is my hope that I will be able to hold onto a piece of this experience each day, to simplify, and to focus on what is truly important.

Learn more about FAME and the great work that they do at www.fameafrica.org.

With A Little Help From Our (Internet) Friends

By

Thursday, July 7th, 2011

bhutan tours

Arrival in the Kingdom of Bhutan

It happens to everybody, even those of us who live, breathe, eat, and dream the travel industry – when faced with the question “how long does it take to get there?” we can freeze like the proverbial fawn in high beams.

Time zones, time differences, flight directions, date lines, layovers – all of these factors can contribute to the length of a journey, and sometimes as adventurers we are more easily enthralled with the whimsy and rewards of a destination rather than the details on how to get there.

Deborah Tobey, a fellow Destination Manager here at Boundless Journeys, has discovered an internet gem in assisting with the logistical questions that may not be heavy on the glamour, but still reign supreme in the planning.

www.travelmath.com can help you with the numerical and mathematical conundrums associated with international travel (just in case you don’t have the World Time Zone Index memorized or aren’t able to guestimate the travel time between LAX and BKK).

Remember that whimsy I mentioned? Its easy to get excited about ziplining in Costa Rica, game viewing in Botswana, or trekking in Peru, but all of these experiences still require crossed t’s and dotted i’s in terms of travel planning. This is why Boundless Journeys is always happy to help supply you with tools to ensure a seamless adventure from door to door, whether it be our own expertise or a helpful external resource. Have any favorite helpful travel sites? Feel free to pass them along via info@boundlessjourneys.com and we’ll share them on our Blog and Facebook.

About Boundless Journeys
Boundless Journeys is an award-winning small group adventure tour operator. With a diverse collection of locally guided, small group itineraries and Private Collection trips around the world, Boundless Journeys offers “The World’s Great Adventures.” The adventure trips for 2-16 guests are active, ranging from leisurely cultural explorations and wildlife safaris to challenging trekking in remote regions ― with plenty of easy to moderate walking and sea kayaking in between.

Destination spotlight: Mongolia

By

Monday, June 20th, 2011
Mongolia tour

Lake Hovsgol

Each country’s customs are different, just as each meadow’s grass is different.  – Mongolian proverb

Mongolia, one of the most sparsely populated countries on Earth, is inhabited by nomadic herders who consider their native landscape sacred. In much of the country, shopping malls are absent, power lines are scarce, and human habitation is likely to consist of a few nomad gers dwarfed by the landscape – a reminder of what the Great Plains of North America must have looked like 300 years ago.

On Boundless Journeys, Land of the Nomads tour, we explore the “Blue Pearl of Mongolia,” Lake Hovsgol. One of the oldest, as well as most pristine lakes in the world, “Mother Sea,” as nomads call it, contains 70% of Mongolia’s and 1% of the world’s freshwater. We hike around the lakeshore and surrounding mountains and meadows, visit local nomads’ dwellings, sample Mongolian-style horseback riding, and learn how to set up a ger.

Mongolia Gobi Tour

Gobi Desert

In diverse contrast, Boundless Journeys guests also visit the great Gobi Desert, located in the southernmost third of Mongolia. By Bacterium Camel and foot we explore towering sand dunes, “forests” of hardy saxaul, the surprisingly colorful desert flora, and the red sandstone spires of the Flaming Cliffs.

With the welcoming nature of the local people, and the wide open space of the land, you feel a sense of peace in what has been called the “last wilderness nation.”

For more information on this journey please see our Mongolia: Land of the Nomads.

About Boundless Journeys
Boundless Journeys is an award-winning small group adventure tour operator. With a diverse collection of locally guided, small group itineraries and Private Collection trips around the world, Boundless Journeys offers “The World’s Great Adventures.” The adventure trips for 2-16 guests are active, ranging from leisurely cultural explorations and wildlife safaris to challenging trekking in remote regions ― with plenty of easy to moderate walking and sea kayaking in between.


Boundless Journeys Facebook Boundless Journeys Twitter

Testimonials

"The trip was absolutely wonderful from start to finish. Dawa and Pema are both very special people and just could not have been nicer, more caring, or more professional. Every day, in every way, they were excellent! The itinerary was perfectly planned and executed. I can't wait for you to use me as a reference for future Boundless Journeys travelers – I will give you a glowing recommendation!"
- Kim Cox, Bhutan: A Journey Into the Peaceful Kingdom





*Required
web analytics