Academic
Academic
projects involve primarily teaching and training situations. Volunteers
will need to prepare to lecture in formal settings, such as hospitals
and doctor training colleges. Powerpoint or other overhead-type
projection media will be very helpful. Volunteers may also accompany
local doctors on rounds or consult on patient care and procedures, but
no formal preparation should be required for this secondary activity.
Credentialed academicians and health care trainers have
the potential to travel into even the most restricted areas of the
world to share their expertise. By incorporating academic projects into
a comprehensive strategy this simple beginning can result in
relationships that provide more invitations into closed countries.
These project requests represent opportunities in which teaching or
training are the primary expectations of the medical missions worker.
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Clinical
Clinical projects involve primarily hands-on practice of medicine.
Volunteers will need to prepare to see patients and to be directly
involved in patient care. Volunteers may also teach local doctors
one-on-one while seeing patients, but no formal preparation should be
required for this secondary activity.
In many places, the provision of health care is seen as
the greatest need by village and government leaders. By working in a
clinical setting medical missions workers can gain access to places and
peoples who do not have any other access to the gospel.
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Development
Development projects involve community development, such as
construction, distributing food or health kits, and work that improves
the living conditions of a community. These projects may frequently
include non-medical people.
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Hybrid
Hybrid projects involve aspects of both Academic and Clinical projects.
Volunteers will need to prepare to lecture in formal settings, as well
as see patients and be directly involved in patient care.
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Locum Tenum
Locum tenum projects involve filling in for missionary medical staff
that will be away from an established medical practice.
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Site Preparation
Site preparation projects utilize non-medical personnel in a variety of
tasks, including prayer and data gathering. Usually, these projects
take place when a new work is being started, or a new phase of a
medical work is about to begin.
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