B.C. health workers heading to Kenya for volunteer mission
Global News
Twenty-three B.C. health workers are heading to Kenya to treat children with facial deformities with Operation Rainbow Canada.
Twenty-three medical professionals are heading overseas for a volunteer mission in Kenya.
The health-care workers are heading to Mombasa to assist in treating children who are born with facial deformities such as cleft palates.
The group is volunteering with Operation Rainbow Canada, which has been helping children around the world for more than 25 years but has been on a pause since the pandemic.
“We fix the children and it’s very emotional,” Dr. Kimit Rai, a cosmetic surgeon out of New Westminster, said. “I felt touched in my heart and it feels good to help people. I am very excited (for this trip).”
The team of 23 including surgeons, nurses and medical assistants will be at a hospital for ten days in the east African city.
This mission team is a first for Operation Rainbow Canada as every member who going is from B.C.
B.C. Children’s Hospital nurse Ryan Kean is part of the team that is travelling. He told Global News the work is humbling and rewarding.
“The passion that (comes) out of some of these families … some of them are walking miles and miles just to get to the hospital where we doing our work. (It is) very, very humbling,” Kean said.