It Happens Every March in Honduras: Celebrating the 40th Anniversary of the Hemwall Honduran Program

ABSTRACT


The Hackett-Hemwall Foundation organizes a medical mission training course every March. JOP columnist and Prolotherapist, Gary B. Clark, MD, MPA, reviews the fortieth anniversary of the Hemwall Honduran program, which occurred in March 2009. The HHF course is the largest Prolotherapy training program of its kind. This physician group provides medical care to over 4,000 Honduran patients annually. Dr. Clark’s article reflects on the history of the program, along with how far it has come and continues to reach.


Journal of Prolotherapy. 2009;1(4):246-248.

In rural Honduras, women often bear many children and work very hard for their entire lives, providing the necessary help to their families that only a mother can give. These women have no 401k retirement funds or paid vacations. If such a woman becomes disabled, she cannot hire a nanny to take her place—if she works at all, she already works as the nanny. So, if such a woman ails, her entire family suffers.

Such was the case last March for a 60-year-old woman who stoically limped into the Honduran Red Cross (Crus Rojas Hondurena) clinic in La Ceiba, Honduras. Yes, she limped—but she had the fire in her eye of pride and independence. She had walked all the way to the intra-city clinic from her rural village outside of La Ceiba. Her painful gait was caused by a sore and swollen knee.

The limp-provoking knee had weighed down this woman for twenty aching years while she unfailingly continued her daily chores and supported her family’s needs. It had been plaguing her daily existence for all that time, slowly but surely becoming progressively worse as each year went by—an all too common story in rural Honduras. But, in the matter of just the next hour, the cause of her knee disability would be specifically diagnosed by careful history and physical examination and set upon the course of healing by a simple, almost painless injection technique wielded by an American physician.

Every March a select team of over 100 dedicated doctors and health-care workers from the United States, Canada, and several other countries of the world visits La Ceiba and two other small towns near the northern Honduran Caribbean coast. Over three weeks, this team of doctors, nurses, technicians, interpreters, and other dedicated volunteers provides careful treatment to over 3,000 patients with multi-joint injury, complicated varicose vein disease, dental disease, and otolaryngologic disease. At the same time that qualified physicians are performing the treatments, they are being guided by mentors, one-on-one. You can figure out the workload performed in a hot, tropical climate and, at the same time, having to work through a volunteer interpreter. As one well-seasoned but first-year doc put it: “Wow! I haven’t worked so hard since internship! This is fabulous!”

It happens every March in Honduras.

Left to right: With their indispensable Honduran interpreter, Gary B. Clark, MD, and Joseph P. Mullane, MD, treat a patient’s knee for multiple ligament sprain injuries.

So, why Honduras? In 1968, Gus Hemwall, an MD Prolotherapist from the Chicago area, met a Honduran pediatrician at a medical meeting in the United States. The Honduran physician was not only from the coastal town of La Ceiba but just happened to be the Vice President of Honduras. The Honduran doctor invited Gus to bring Prolotherapy to La Ceiba. On that invitation, Dr. Hemwall first visited La Ceiba in 1968 and met Lester and Margaret Beckman. Lester “Beck” Beckman was Assistant General Manager for Dole Fruit Company at the time.

That first visit spurred Gus to organizing a yearly trip with like-motivated physicians to La Ceiba. Aided by the Beckmans, the Dole Fruit Company, and the Honduran Red Cross, this small band of philanthropic doctors began making a difference in the lives of the rural and urban Honduran people. From the very beginning, the Beckman’s were staunch supporters of the Honduran medical project, offering their time, their home, and their fortune. Since then, many a physician has learned and, in turn, has taught the basics of Prolotherapy aided initially by American and Canadian teachers, armed with Netter’s Anatomy and a rickety old skeleton—all nestled under the welcome shade of the huge mango tree in Lester’s and Margaret’s backyard.

Left to right: Chet Hermansen, Margaret Beckman, Mary Doherty, and Jeffery Patterson, DO, as Jeff acknowledges Margaret’s forty years of gracious service to HHF and the Honduran people.

Gus planned the first medical project for later in September 1968. However, as Margaret relates the story, it was very rainy at that time, so the first project was rescheduled for March 1969. There were only 7 people on the first medical mission trip. But, it was not too long before the project eventually became much larger and very diverse in its organization. In its largest year, there were 150 MDs, DDSs, RNs, engineers, medical assistants, drivers, and cooks and the medical care provided was of a broad medical-surgical spectrum.

Jeff Patterson’s first year in Honduras was in 1987, when he served in the small coastal town of Tela on invitation by Dr. Hemwall. In 1994, Dr. Hemwall refocused the project on providing just Prolotherapy and Vein Therapy. Dr. Hemwall’s last year in La Ceiba was 1997. In 1998, Gus Hemwall died while attending a Prolotherapy conference.

Dr. Hemwall always conducted the Honduran gathering in a medical mission style. This style has been carried on by Jeff Patterson as much as possible. Through 2005, it was common for the entire group to assemble at Margaret’s home for supper after a very long day’s work—before the 1-2 hour long evening didactic Prolotherapy lecture. The entire group would always pause around Margaret’s dining room table—heavily laden with that evening’s scrumptious meal—to give united thanks for their good fortune to be in the succor of Margaret’s home and to be able to help the Honduran people. That evening dinner grace has been led by healthcare providers of many spiritual persuasions.

Honduran patient receiving Prolotherapy to the neck and thoracic spine. “Kids, don’t try this at home.”

The Hackett-Hemwall Honduran Program now includes three treatment locations:

  • La Ceiba is a city of approximately 100,000 people, lying at the foot of 5000 feet Pico Bonito, and still a major banana port. The work there is sponsored by the local Honduran Red Cross.
  • Tela, of approximately 50,000 people, is a seaside town and former home of the Tela Railroad Company, producers of Chiquita Bananas. The work there is sponsored by the Tela Evangelical Church.
  • Olanchito, of approximately 30,000 people, is located further inland within the mountains. The work there is sponsored by the Sociedad de Agriculturores y Gandares de Olanchito.

Dr. Hemwall’s pioneering efforts have since continued through the Hackett-Hemwall Foundation (HHF), which continues Gus’ dream for the Hondurans and other nationalities. The Foundation is led by a handful of dedicated osteopathic and medical doctors centered in Madison, Wisconsin, under the direction of Dr. Jeffrey Patterson, administrated by Mary Doherty, and supported academically by the University of Wisconsin. HHF has grown to include healthcare work in Honduras, Mexico, and the Philippines.

The Foundation has 3 basic goals: education, research, and medical care. In keeping with its goal of education, their Prolotherapy Program is the largest training program of its kind in the world. HHF considers Prolotherapy as a surgical subspecialty that requires significant education and practical hands-on training to perform really well. Consequently, HHF strives to provide the best Prolotherapy training available to physicians anywhere in the world. Over the years, the Foundation has trained hundreds of physicians in Prolotherapy from eighteen different countries.

The HHF Vein Program, under the direction of Rick Owens, MD, is expanding and providing similar education and clinical care. Dr. Owens has brought his and other phlebologists’ expertise to provide ultrasound-guided vein sclerosis to the Honduran people using the most up-to-date vein sclerosing techniques. Physicians from across the United States and Canada travel with their ultrasound machines to share their knowledge and skills and to treat hundreds of extremely needy patients with horribly severe varicose vein disease—you have to see one of these weeping, crusted ulcers to realize what “horrible” really means. The HHF ENT program (which occurs in February) is under the direction of Michael McDonald, MD. The Dental Program is under the direction of Dana Lubet, DDS.

Left to right: Irene Briceno, MD, and Stephen Cavillino, MD, perform cervical spine Prolotherapy.

HHF has fostered a working relationship with the medical school in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, to train anesthesiology residents—much through the continuous effort of Dan Wert, DO. HHF is actively establishing relationships with medical schools in Honduras, Nicaragua and Guadalajara, Mexico. Likewise, HHF has fostered excellent working relationships with local Honduran physicians who receive HHF training in joint and vein therapies.

The entire group of HHF doctors and supportive staff at Tela.

In supporting research, HHF continues to fund ongoing basic and clinical research in Prolotherapy.

In providing medical care, HHF is currently providing medical care to approximately 4,000 Honduran patients yearly, providing Prolotherapy, Vein Sclerosing, ENT Surgery and Dental Care. In addition, HHF works with local Honduran schools and hospitals, providing them with supply and logistical needs. HHF is following suit in Mexico and the Philippines, treating hundreds more there, as well.

This group picture was taken during the 1993 Honduras trip. Dr. Hemwall is in the backseat of the truck. His legacy lives on, every March in Honduras.

As for the 60-year-spry Honduran lady in La Ceiba last March? She—along with the hundreds of others who made their way to the Honduran Red Cross that week—happily returned to her home and family. An American doctor had treated her knee by using Prolotherapy. She had been definitively treated and was bolstered with reaffirmed hope—for the first time in years—of finally being free of disabling pain.

It happens every March in Honduras.

Acknowledgment


Portions for this article were taken from the magazine of The International Society for the Study of Subtle Energies and Energy Medicine (ISSEEEM): It Happens Every March in Honduras, Gary B. Clark, M.D., M.P.A., with interview material from Carol Schneider, Ph.D., Bridges, Volume 16, Number 4, Winter, 2005.