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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
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Local
dentist works in Nicaragua
Imagine that
a toothbrush cost $1,000 -- if you could find one at all. Daily dental care
would be out of reach for most people.
That's the way it is in the
rural hinterlands of Nicaragua, where Sisters dentist Steve Spear spent
two weeks in January.
The trek was a low-key affair
organized by Bend resident Tim Jeffries, who has been visiting Condega,
Nicaragua, for 20 years, helping its residents in various ways to cope
with the fallout from revolution, civil war and natural disasters.
The resiliency of the people
in the face of disaster and poverty made a strong impression on Spear.
"These people... they don't
give up," he said.
And their strength is not
of a grim and brittle type. They are full of the joy of life.
"They're happy," Spear said.
"really, really happy."
But they do have problems,
including very poor dental care. The personnel at the clinic where Spear
worked were skilled and professional -- they simply lacked basic equipment
and medicines.
"It was daunting at first,"
Spear admitted. "Sterilization does not exist. Sterilization is not even
a concept, really. Clean, yeah."
There is a difference between
clean and sterile and Spear provided a convection oven to help with the
sterilization of tools. He hopes the fickle electrical current in Condega
doesn't burn it out.
The lack of modern equipment
and facilities does not equate with primitive skills. Spear said the staff
was remarkably capable in ways that the most skilled American dentists
with their state-of-the-art equipment find hard to emulate.
"We're so technology-oriented
that if something breaks down we throw up our hands and say, 'we're done,'"
Spear said.
That's not an option in Condega,
since their high-tech equipment dates to the 1950s and '60s and much of
it broke down years and years ago.
Spear and the clinic dentists
saw 50 to 60 patients a day; men, women and children who came into the
clinic from all over the neighboring countryside.
"It's basically just extracting
teeth," Spear said. "Most of the teeth we were extracting were first molars,
teeth that had been in the mouth the longest and they'd never seen a toothbrush."
That simple implement is critical,
according to Spear. They are extremely scarce and practically nobody could
afford to buy one out of their $100-a-year income.
"Toothbrushes are non-existent,"
Spear said. "If you took down 10,000 it wouldn't be too many."
Spear plans to return -- with
toothbrushes and other dental equipment.
He was deeply smitten by the
country and its people. Despite a history of U.S. intervention -- including
support for the Contras in a brutal civil war -- the people seemed to
like Americans.
"Everyone has a perception
that going to Nicaragua is dangerous," Spear said. "Actually, by everything
I read, in Latin America it is one of the safest places for a tourist.
"I certainly found it that
way," he said. "At no time did I feel threatened."
Those interested in more information
or in making donations -- particularly of toothbrushes -- may contact
Spear at 549-0973.
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