News
AAOMS NEWS RELEASE
This past May 2008, Drs. Jeffrey Moses, David Hoffman and Igor Tarlo represented American trained OMF Surgeons in a Smiles International Foundation- led surgical mission to Dnepropetrovsk, Ukraine. Gratitude is given to the Variety Children’s Lifeline and the Smile Train for funds given to treat the region’s orphans and underprivileged children afflicted with cleft facial deformities.
This mission site was initiated by Smiles International Foundation in September 2005 and has held biannual clinics since that time. This trip, an additional 45 children were added to the clinics database with screening and treatment plans developed as well as over 40 surgical procedures performed on 17 children under general anesthesia. While the majority of these procedures involved primary repairs of the cleft lip, palate and face, several cleft rhinoplasties as well as a debulking of a facial labial lymphangioma were performed as well. Many of these procedures served as demonstrations of modern techniques using the newly donated surgical equipment provided to the host surgical site through matching grant funds from the Rotary Clubs of Carlsbad and Mission Bay, located in San Diego, California. Gratitude is given to the KLS Martin and Stryker Craniomaxillofacial, as well as Ellman Corporations for their discounts of purchase price. Over $50,000 worth of instrumentation was obtained for $25,000 due to their charitable contributions.
A valuable by-product of television and news-press coverage involving the local Ukrainian Rotary Club’s receiving the USA Rotary club’s matching grant equipment and then awarding it to the local hospital, was the increase in the region’s population’s awareness of the upgraded facility and the availability of pediatric cleft surgical treatments. The Ukraine’s Regional Deputy of Medical Services verbally urged the press media to spread the news in order to reduce the frequency of parental placement of their children suffering with these facial clefts into the state orphanage system.
Several success stories of children restored to their original families followed the conference in subsequent interviews.
The Smiles International Foundation hosted a C.M.E. conference where Dr. David Hoffman presented a well- received interactive lecture to the Mechnikov Hospital Staff on the topic of local flap reconstruction following Mohs Surgery of facial carcinomas.
Persons interested in Surgical Mission Care Abroad should contact Dr. Moses at http://www.smilesinternationalfoundation.org/ and register as a volunteer, or directly at:
DrJeffMoses@yahoo.com
International Surgeons Toast Successful Clinic..Pictured left to right: Dr. Igor Tarlo, Dr. Alexei Komok, Dr. David Hoffman, Dr. Anatoly Komok, Dr. Jeffrey Moses, Dr.Oleg Maleyovich
Orphan Patient#1 Pre-op
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Orphan Patient#1 Post-op
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Orphan Cleft Patient #2 Pre-op
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Orphan Cleft Patient #2 Post-op
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Smiles International Directors, Maribel and Dr. Jeff Moses
Dr. Moses and Hon.Patricia Hunter R.N., Present Donated Equipment to the Hospital for Rotary International Matching Grants.
Carlsbad and Tecate Rotary clubs help kids with facial deformities
LINK:Smiles of Tecate North County Times Article
The Rotary Club of Tecate joined forces with the Rotary Club of Carlsbad recently to cut the ribbon on the first children's facial deformity surgical clinic.
The clinic will perform complex surgical procedures under general anesthesia with the Mexican town of Tecate's state-of-the-art facility built specifically for the centennial anniversary of Rotary. Dr. Jeff Moses, Carlsbad Rotarian and founder of the Smiles International Foundation, along with his wife, Maribel, worked closely with Rotarians, doctors and local officials from both sides of the border over the last year to locate patients and arrange supplies and logistics. Out of the first 12 patients screened and treated, there were four selected for general anesthesia and two to four surgeries were performed for each child.
The surgical team leader, Dr. Kevin Smith, also a Rotarian, was accompanied by his co-team leader, Dr. B.J. Costello and their colleagues from Oklahoma and Pennsylvania. Dr. Marcos Ramirez from the Rotary Club of Tecate worked side by side with the Rotarians and on the dental team with Drs. Gary Godward and Bob Fleming, providing needed dental treatments for the children. Ramirez also headed the follow-up clinic for the children, assuring a successful continuity of treatment. The official name for this project is ‘Smiles of Tecate,' or, in Spanish, ‘Sonrisas de Tecate.' Right are team members in front of the new clinic.
Facial-surgery team helps children get their smiles
San Diego Union Tribune
Physicians travel around the globe
By Marcia Manna
February 24, 2007
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SEAN DuFRENE / Union-Tribune |
Dr. Jeff Moses of Smiles International Foundation has helped children with cleft lip and palate defects. |
OLIVENHAIN - Ten years ago, Francisco Montoya sat in his mother's lap for an 800-mile bus ride on the remote roads of Baja California.
Silky black curls framed the toddler's brown face, in contrast to the deep pink gashes that split his upper lip. His parents were too poor to afford the medical care Francisco required, but they had heard of a free surgical clinic in Ensenada, staffed with specialists who would repair cleft lips and palates during the few days they were in town. The surgical team was headed by Jeff Moses, a recently retired maxillofacial surgeon and the founder of Smiles International Foundation, which he operates from his Encinitas home.
Francisco was a case that Moses remembers well. He overheard the boy's parents arguing in the waiting room, apparently about putting Francisco up for adoption if they could not get help.
“I saw this beautiful young boy, all that was wrong was a bilateral cleft,” said Moses, 54. “But our schedule was full to the point where nurses and doctors would work well into the night the next day. I asked the team, can we do this? To their credit, they all pitched in.”
Getting specialists to contribute has turned out to be the doctor's forte.
His nonprofit organization brings together teams of doctors and lays the foundation for periodic clinics that provide free surgery to children born with facial deformities.
When he launched Smiles International 20 years ago, Moses took on two substantial roles. He organized the mission teams and performed many of the surgeries. But there were so many children in need that he often felt frustrated.
“I found that I could only operate on so many cases,” he said. “Now we can bring in four surgeons and do numerous cases at the same time.”
To understand how Moses accomplished that goal, one has to go back to 1987, when Smiles International Foundation was formed under the umbrella of Pacific Clinical Research Foundation.
The goal of PCRF was to build a pool of doctors who offered continuing education credits through major universities. The money Moses earned through teaching and presenting symposiums funded mission trips. As more doctors learned of the cleft lip and palate surgeries Moses was performing in developing countries, more got involved.
A member of the Rotary Club of Carlsbad, Moses was also successful in obtaining financial support from his local group and from Rotary International, which has 32,000 clubs worldwide.
The organizations have helped to purchase medical equipment and supplies for mission clinics, including the one that helped Francisco in Ensenada.
Moses has formed surgical teams that have traveled to Mexico, Costa Rica, Panama, Guatemala, Ecuador and Ukraine.
The clinics are set up at regular intervals, and Moses said the physicians who donate their skills get a “tremendous sense of satisfaction” from being part of an ongoing effort.
Cleft lip and palate defects occur randomly in about 700 to 1,000 births annually worldwide, and multiple operations are needed as a child grows. The cleft can be slight or severe, extending through the lips and gums and into the nasal cavity.
Affected children in developing countries have little chance of getting the costly medical attention they require and they are frequently abandoned. Feeding problems, middle ear infections, orthodontic abnormalities and speech difficulties are just some of the challenges these children face.
Socially, the condition can be devastating. Children with facial defects and their families may become outcasts, especially in areas where religious and cultural superstitions are prevalent.
Several interventions, including surgery, dental and orthodontic care, speech and psychological therapy are typically required.
“Now I'm blessed to be retired and working full time in the foundation,” Moses said. “I can arrange for people to meet the needs of other people.”
The growing group of surgeons serving mission clinics has started a ripple effect that benefits everyone involved. Doctors learn techniques they normally wouldn't encounter in private practice, and children with long-term medical needs are treated by a team of specialists. Occasionally, those specialists include local doctors who try to sustain the clinic after the U.S. physicians leave.
The children who return to the clinic for additional procedures get to know one another, too, which helps them understand they are not alone.
In March, Moses will head for Tecate, joining longtime colleague Dr. Kevin Smith, co-director of The University of Oklahoma J. W. Keys Cleft and Craniofacial Clinic and The University of Tulsa Mary K. Chapman Cleft and Craniofacial Clinic.
The two have worked together at many mission clinics and Smith said Moses spurred him to start his own Rotary-funded foundation.
Smith, in turn, has inspired others. A Guatemalan doctor who volunteered at a mission where Smith performed surgeries decided to train with Smith in the United States. Then he returned to Guatemala with advanced medical skills.
As for young Francisco Montoya, Moses performed a series of surgeries on the boy over five years. The medical care changed the boy's destiny. “The mother and father were together with him in a whole different way,” Moses said, “and there was a good chance his face would look normal.”
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MEDICAL NEWS BRIEF
U.S. SURGEONS OPERATE CLEFT PALATE ORPHANS IN UKRAINE
This September of 2006, a team of U.S.
based volunteers cemented medical ties with the Mechnikov Center located in the town of Dnepropetrovsk , Ukraine in order to finalize the treatments for orphans afflicted with birth defects. Over 40 children were treated with 17 surgical procedures being performed on 9 (nine) of the infants.
As organizer of an ongoing project sponsored completely by Variety Children’s Lifeline, Dr. Jeff Moses, a retired California based oral and maxillofacial surgeon, Rotarian and founder of the Smiles International Foundation, led the team back to the Ukraine in order to continue care for the orphans and to finalize plans for the International Craniofacial support team. The team members in September included operation room nurses, Patricia Hunter and Teresa Spinosa, patient coordinator, Maribel Vargas, and maxillofacial surgeons, Dr. David Hoffman, Dr. Alex Mizin, and Dr. Slava Shapiro.
This team treats primary birth deformities of the face in infants and young children in addition to operating and correcting the growth disturbances these deformities frequently develop into. There are numerous orphanages in this region that will benefit from this team’s biannual presence, and the two nations continued ambassadorial exchange of information will only add to the variety of techniques available to both countries surgeons.
Equipment and supplies have been donated to the mission site on each of the visits which has helped to provide for technological support as well.
For further information on these or other mission efforts, contact:
Jeffrey J. Moses D.D.S., F.A.A.C.S.
Smiles International Foundation
Phone: 858-442-1551
Email: DrJeffMoses@yahoo.com
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