THE JOURNEY HOME JOURNAL
by: Bobby Manzano, President & Executive Director, OSP
We scored recently a major coup in our continuing effort
to heighten public awareness of Operation Smile when the Philippine’s most
widely read and most influential broadsheet and online news source, Philippine
Daily Inquirer, picked us as the subject of its main editorial.
The editorial recognizes the gravity of the cleft problem
and tells how Operation Smile has been addressing it for the past 30 years. It’s a beautifully written piece and we are
reprinting it in full below to share with you.
Another story, a touching feature on one former patient
who achieved her dream to become a nurse, came out in the newspaper’s Visayas
edition. We are also sharing this with
you.
We’ve had several interviews on television and radio in
the run-up to The Journey Home and during the mission proper itself. We’re also running on donated airtime a
30-second television commercial, which advertising giant McCann Erickson
created gratis.
The advertisement, which you can watch online in our
website (www.operationsmile.org.ph)
won the prestigious Catholic Mass Media Award. It has swayed many donors.
Philippine Daily
Inquirer
12:32 am | Sunday, November 18th, 2012
Editorial
The gift of a smile
So many take a smile
for granted. After all, it’s the most natural and spontaneous expression of
happiness, never mind how fleeting it may be. But what if you are unable to
smile? Or you don’t smile like other people do? Or your smile causes some
embarrassment or discrimination?
This is the secret
pain of those who suffer from harelips and cleft palates: Despite this being
the 21st century, they often are the subject of teasing and insults—which can
traumatize children all their lives and hinder their progression as adults.
American craniofacial
surgeon Dr. William P. Magee Jr. is very familiar with the condition: “Cleft
palate is the opening in the roof of the mouth that occurs when the two sides
of a palate don’t join together, while cleft lip, also called ‘harelip,’ is the
opening in the upper lip that can extend to the base of the nostrils,” he said.
A patient can even have both conditions, which is dangerous because it is
easier for bacteria to enter the mouth and spread to the rest of the body
resulting in everything from dental problems to malnutrition, making it
imperative that young children suffering from these conditions get an operation
to correct them.
That’s what Magee and
his wife Kathleen have been doing for 30 years now. And they have multiplied
themselves for the cause through an international charity organization that has
a perfect name: Operation Smile.
The journey of
Operation Smile began in 1982, when the Magees were on a medical mission in
Naga. There they discovered that many children were suffering from harelips and
cleft palates but could not get medical help because the parents could not
afford it. With their daughter helping run a fund-raising campaign in the
United States, Operation Smile has since mobilized more than 5,000 volunteers
in 80 countries and performed over 200,000 surgeries. In the Philippines alone,
Operation Smile has performed surgery on 24,000 people, changing lives
immensely.
Many more need help.
Some 4,000 children with some kind of lip deformity are born every year in the
Philippines, according to Roberto Manzano, Operation Smile Philippines
president. “There are more children with cleft problems in poorer areas and
local villages, which don’t even have proper hospitals,” he said, adding that
the charity has operated on people of every age—from a 6-month-old baby to a
60-year-old grandmother.
Manzano emphasized
the need for surgery. “Unknown to many, the deformity contributes to the high
infant mortality rate in developing countries,” he said. Operation Smile’s data
state that 10 percent of children born with cleft problems (some 400 patients a
year) die before reaching their first birthday and 12 percent (480 kids) die
before they reach the age of 5.
That’s why Operation
Smile is now gearing up to perform more surgeries and help more patients than
ever before. The charity aims to operate on 4,500 children in nine different
sites in the Philippines come December, with the help of 1,000 volunteers from
around the world, deployed in 10 missions.
Operation Smile
continues to evolve. The Philippines does not have any kind of registry of
children with cleft problems, but this will change now that Ateneo Java
Wireless Competency Center and Smart Communications have created OpSmile
Mobile. This application for Operation Smile would make it possible for social
workers to use their cell phones to record cleft births and collate them into a
national registry. Operation Smile has also established two permanent cleft
care facilities in Sta. Ana Hospital in Manila and Brokenshire Hospital in
Davao City. “Operation Smile is ready to partner with any reputable
organization, be they public or private, local or international, to make cleft
care readily available to those who can least afford it,” Manzano said.
Operation Smile’s
success has become its own testament and covenant. As Magee said: “Big or small
contributions are appreciated. We have 5,500 volunteers worldwide and people
usually know of the organization from friends. People want to genuinely do good
things, and we help them take the first step. Children are children are
children—Asian, Latino, Christian, Jew, Muslim—and they need help.”
Inquirer Visayas
12:16 am | Saturday, November 17th, 2012
A journey home for ‘Operation
Smile’ on its 30th mission year
By Carla P. Gomez
As Operation Smile
marks its 30th year of wonderful work, it is clear that many Filipino families
owe the Magees big time for having started this life-changing charity. The
Magees are truly a couple for others. Their devotion to their cause—helping
children break free from the “harelip trap” and literally smile at the world—is
admirable. There is no question, they are changing the world, one smile at a
time.
DR. WILLIAM Magee and
his wife, Kathy , Operation Smile International Mission founders, receive a
plaque of recognition from Gov. Alfredo MaraƱon Jr. and his wife, Marilyn, at
the thanksgiving dinner at the Provincial Capitol Social Hall in Bacolod City
on Tuesday night for the Operation Smile volunteers who are into their 19th
surgical mission for the cleft palate and lip. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
Since she was a
little girl, May Klaire Parparan has always wanted to become a nurse. But she
lost hope when a teenager rudely told her when she was 7 years old: “How can
you become a nurse when nurses are beautiful and you’re different?”
“That was when I realized
that I was not like the others. My world fell apart. I lost my dream. There did
not seem to be a future for me,” she said.
May Klaire was born
with a cleft lip, but she never paid attention to her deformity. She always
felt special and loved by her family, until she heard the teenager’s remarks.
At age 5, she
underwent surgery but it failed to fix the deformity.
In 1994, surgeons
from Operation Smile went to Bacolod
City, 78 kilometers from her hometown in Isabela, Negros Occidental. May
Klaire, then 12, was one of the lucky child beneficiaries of the medical
mission.
Traces of her
deformity were removed, and since then, her life has changed for the better.
“I became more
confident. My self-esteem grew. I discovered my self-worth and respected myself
more so others would respect me, too,” she said.
Her self-confidence
helped her achieve her dream of becoming a nurse.
Now 30, May Klaire is
a registered nurse working as a volunteer at Ignacio Arroyo Memorial District
Hospital in Isabela. She is one of 2,628 patients whose lives have been changed
by Operation Smile since it began its work in Negros Occidental in 1988.
Operation Smile
provides free surgeries to repair cleft palate, cleft lip and other facial
deformities of children in the country. The Negros Occidental mission is being
undertaken for nine days in coordination with the Hope Volunteers Foundation.
A total of 150 children had been scheduled to be
operated up to Nov. 17 at Teresita L. Jalandoni Provincial Hospital in Silay
City, Negros Occidental.
Among them are
6-year-old twins, Dhesa and Dhea Rodriguez, who are daughters of a truck driver
from Barangay Cabadiangan in Himamaylan
City, also in Negros Occidental.
MAY KLAIRE Parparan,
a registered nurse, was 12 years old when her cleft lip was repaired by
Operation Smile’s surgeons. Carla P. Gomez
In 2009, Operation
Smile operated on the twins’ cleft lips. On Wednesday, they underwent surgery
anew, this time for cleft palates.
Edith Villanueva,
Hope vice president and overall coordinator of the mission, said 230 patients
with deformities from the 305 applicants had been screened. But only 150 could
be accommodated, she added.
Operation Smile
started in Naga City in Camarines Sur in 1982. Dr. William Magee and his wife,
Kathleen, who are from Virginia State in the United States, traveled with a
group of volunteers to Naga for what was supposed to be a one-time mission to
repair children’s cleft lips and palates.
But the couple noted
so many more with deformities who needed help, so their work became the world’s
largest volunteer-based medical charity dedicated to providing free cleft
surgeries to children in developing countries today.
Operation Smile
Philippines Foundation Inc. was
registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Aug. 18, 1988, as a
nonstock, nonprofit organization. It was the very first resource country
organization of the Operation Smile International global network.
Some 7,000 volunteers
are scattered in 80 countries, staying permanently in 61. A total of 200,000
children have been assisted.
To mark the global
celebration of the 30th anniversary of Operation Smile, Robert Manzano,
Operation Smile Philippines president and executive director, said a monthlong
medical mission would be conducted in nine cities—Koronadal, Naga, Angeles,
Silay, Cagayan de Oro, Manila, DasmariƱas, General Santos and Cebu.
Magee acknowledged
that when he first came to the Philippines 30 years ago, he did not come solely
for humanitarian reasons. He was a young plastic surgeon who wanted to become
better at his craft.
In Naga, however, he
noticed that so many children needed help and that this had changed his
direction and purpose in life. It taught him and those in the team to think
with their hearts to make a difference in the lives of others, he said.
“I am 100-percent
sure if we had gone to a country other than the Philippines that first year,
there would be no Operation Smile,” Magee said.
He pointed out that
the warmth, generosity, openness and the beauty of the Filipino people made
them want to come back to the Philippines.
To mark the group’s
30th anniversary, Magee said it decided to make “a journey home because the
Philippines is the home of Operation Smile.” It was also its way of saying
thanks, he added.
“Filipinos have a
special gift of warmth, hospitality and openness that tells people— come back
and work side by side with us,” he said.
Magee’s wife,
Kathleen, a pediatric nurse, said the Philippines gave the Operation Smile
volunteers the opportunity to make what was impossible for many possible in
order to have new lives.
But there is still a
huge backlog of patients. Oral cleft is among the top 12 congenital defects in
the country.
Data gathered by
Operation Smile showed that one in every 500 or about 4,000 Filipinos are born
every year with a harelip, a cleft palate, or both.
At least 10 percent
of the cleft children, or 400, die before reaching their first birthday and 12
percent, or 480, do not live past the age of five.
“We want to reach
these unfortunate children so we can treat them at an early age,” Manzano said.
Filipinos can help
the children by donating P30. “If every
Filipino donated P30 to change the lives of children with a deformity in the
country, we can stir a revolution,” Magee said.
Others have also
started Christmas fundraising drives, Manzano said.
To donate to
Operation Smile, one can go to its website at
http://philippines.operationsmile.org/how-to-help/donate/ for details, or to
send P30, one can key in SMILE to 4483 through Smart and Sun networks