
每日大赛's Global Brigades
鈥淚f I were to get sick, living in a village, I鈥檇 have to take the bus at least an hour to get to a place where they could treat me,鈥 said Zeidan, a senior studying pre-med at 每日大赛.
Zeidan eventually moved to Dearborn, where he is surrounded by a number of reputable medical centers. But his experience growing up in Lebanon with limited access to medical treatment resonated with him.
It鈥檚 what inspired Zeidan to organize a trip to Honduras this summer, where he and about 20 UM-Dearborn students will treat local residents suffering from medical and dental ailments.
鈥淗ealing people is universal,鈥 said Zeidan, who plans to enroll in medical school after graduation. 鈥淲e can really make a difference in a lot of people鈥檚 lives over there.鈥
Their trip is part of Global Brigades, the world鈥檚 largest student-led movement for global health and sustainable development. UM-Dearborn is one of more than 200 campuses worldwide with a Global Brigades chapter.
The organization鈥檚 mission is to deliver medical and dental care to international rural communities with limited access to healthcare. Enter Honduras.
There, UM-Dearborn students will receive firsthand clinical experience, while assisting physicians, dentists, nurses and pharmacists from Honduras and southeast Michigan.
鈥淚鈥檓 excited to get clinical experience, like checking vitals and just talking to the patients there,鈥 said Usha Kadiyala, a junior biochemistry major who helped organize the campus鈥 Global Brigades chapter. 鈥淎 lot of our pre-med students volunteer at hospitals, but they don鈥檛 get direct-care experience. This trip offers that, plus it鈥檚 an international experience, so we get to learn about the health care differences between our country and theirs.鈥
The students鈥 journey is slated to begin May 18, as UM-Dearborn will team up with UM-Ann Arbor for a joint health brigade. During their seven-day trip, students could treat upwards of 3,000 Hondurans.
鈥淓veryone has a purpose in life,鈥 Zeidan said. 鈥淢ine is to help make a difference, and that鈥檚 exactly what we plan on doing in Honduras.鈥
The trip, however, comes with its share of expenses. Each student is expected to pay $1,500 to cover transportation, lodging and food. Additional funding is necessary to cover the cost of medication, supplies and hygienic products, like toothbrushes and bandages, which will be disbursed to Hondurans.
In an effort to reduce students鈥 financial burden when traveling to Honduras, Dean Martin Hershock plans to allocate money from the College of Arts, Sciences, and Letters鈥 Annual Fund.
鈥淭he eagerness of these students to engage in this program speaks volumes about their dedication to their chosen course of study, but also about the reasons why they have chosen this particular career path,鈥 Hershock said. 鈥淚鈥檓 incredibly proud of what this group of students has been able to pull together in a very short time, and of the way that they embody our campus commitment to engagement. This is exactly the sort of activity that our alumni enthusiastically support鈥揳ctivity that transforms both the individual student, as well as the world in which we live.鈥
To donate to the students鈥 trip.