Maggie Lovett may be volunteering with Unite for Sight. But the Dal student says she hopes her own eyes are opened by her experiences in Ghana.
鈥淚 hope to get a better picture of global health issues,鈥 says the fourth-year Biology (honours) student. 鈥淚鈥檇 like to go to medical school one day and I鈥檇 like to be a physician who can do these sorts of things, be a humanitarian doctor.
鈥淪o I鈥檇 like to get a better understanding of what it鈥檚 like on the ground.鈥
Ms. Lovett, 21, first heard about Unite for Sight 鈥 a U.S.-based non-profit organization working to improve eye health and eliminate preventable blindness 鈥 a couple of years ago.
Working with the group, which does outreach in Ghana, Honduras, and India, appealed to her, in large part because her own father lost his vision because of a degenerative eye disease.
鈥淰ision is something that people often take for granted,鈥 notes Ms. Lovett. 鈥淚t鈥檚 only when it鈥檚 gone that you鈥檙e struck by how important it is 鈥 especially somewhere like Ghana where most people in the rural villages make their living by farming and textiles and craft-making, so vision is really important.鈥
Unite for Sight was founded in 2000 by Jennifer Staple-Clark, who was then a sophomore at Yale University. The agency has trained more than 4,000 volunteers and provided services to a million people worldwide, including more than 32,500 surgeries.
Ms. Lovett left Halifax June 14 and 鈥 after playing tourist for five days in London 鈥 will land in Accra, the capital city of Ghana, a nation on the western coast of Africa. From there she, along with other volunteers from across North America, will take a 12-hour van ride into Tamale, a northern city that will serve as their base.
The volunteers will work with a local eye clinic and its staff, including one ophthalmologist who used to go months without performing cataract surgery because residents living in extreme poverty could not afford it. Now, thanks to funding from Unite for Sight, he鈥檚 doing more than 2,200 of the procedures each year.
Ms. Lovett and her compatriots, with help from clinic staff, will do outreach in villages in northern Ghana. They鈥檒l distribute eyeglasses and sunglasses, test vision and arrange for further treatment (and transportation) for people with cataracts, glaucoma or other eye disease.
鈥淐ataract surgery is a really simple procedure,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t takes seven to 15 minutes, really, to have it done. Literally, the next day they can take off the bandages and see, which is pretty remarkable.鈥
To prepare for the mission, Ms. Lovett completed a series of online training modules, as well as a cultural sensitivity program, and shadowed the staff at Doctors Eye Clinic in Spryfield.
She鈥檚 been a regular volunteer with the Halifax Sexual Health Clinic and an animal shelter in Dartmouth 鈥 she鈥檚 active in Dal鈥檚 student union and was recently elected a senator, too 鈥 but her first global volunteer opportunity was a welcome one.
鈥淭he furthest I鈥檝e ever been is Ontario, so it鈥檚 a big leap,鈥 she says. She will return to her summer job in a neuroscience lab at Dal after three weeks in Ghana.
She paid her own airfare and lodging and also put a lot of effort into fundraising. Her goal was $2,000, which she figures will pay for 50 cataract surgeries.
鈥淥ne of the things I really love about Unite for Sight is that this money that鈥檚 donated, 100 per cent is going to the patient,鈥 Ms. Lovett points out.
You can make a donation, and read about her adventure, through her blog: