Within moments of arriving in Playa Verde, Panama, members of the Floating Doctors and EVMS medical
mission team made a lifesaving difference for a young girl. A week earlier, the girl had fallen from a
partially constructed shelter perched on stilts high above the ground. Her broken leg was now severely
infected.
While the team’s music therapist played guitar to refocus the crying girl, others splinted her leg and
gave her a dose of antibiotics. By the time they were done, she was singing and laughing despite the
pain.
With the help of Floating Doctors’ resources and a referral from a Panamanian physician working with the
group, they were able to make arrangements to send her and her mother on a small boat to the nearest
hospital.
“If she hadn’t been seen by a medical professional, she could have easily become septic and died,” says
Alexandra Leader, MD, MPH, Director of Global Health, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics.
“Remote villages like this one,” Dr. Leader explains, “rely on a far-flung network of healthcare
professionals and advocates to gain access to lifesaving care.”
Bernardo Canga, MMT, Music Therapist, sings in
Spanish
to a clinic patient to help refocus her attention.