One smile at a time

Providing necessary dental care to remote and underserved communities is what drives these seagoing volunteers.

Words Catherine Sylvester 

The year 2020 was meant to be the year for YWAM Ships Aotearoa (YSA). Having been gifted a container ship in 2019 by Stoney Creek Shipping, the local team had spent the previous months fitting it out with everything needed to take dental and basic health care across the Pacific Ocean to the peoples of the Solomon Islands. Then March 2020 came along, and we know how this story plays out. 

But the spirit of determination runs deep within the greater YWAM organisation. Founded 63 years ago in the US, with the goal of equipping young people to volunteer worldwide, Youth With a Mission (pronounced why-wham) has had a base in Tauranga since 2005. Medical “Mercy Ships” were introduced internationally in the late 1970s to enable healthcare to be sent to some of the harder-to-reach nations of the world.

Tauranga-based managing director of YSA Marty Emmett was determined not to let the pandemic entirely derail the work his team had already planned. “The gift of lockdown was that it gave us time to reanalyse who we are and what our purpose is,” he explains. “It started this amazing journey of looking at how we could still utilise this ship and its facilities if we weren’t able to travel internationally.”

The decision was made at the beginning of 2021 to take the container that housed the dental clinic off the ship, and reach into the Bay of Plenty, offering free work for the most serious of oral health cases in the community.

Retired local dentist Sue Cole came on board to lead the team. “What drives me is seeing transformations in people – physical and emotional,” Sue says. “We offer a hand up, rather than a handout.”

Within the first 18 months of operating the Trinity Koha Dental Clinic, Sue and the volunteer dentists cared for 1,900 patients, and performed over $1 million worth of free dental services.

Equally important as the practical services offeredis the holistic care for clients. Marty explains that for many of those attending clinics, a history of dental trauma is carried with them. A dedicated “Call and Care” team ensures time is spent connecting with clients over the phone, discussing concerns and assuaging fears. “Sometimes, to get a patient to the stage of getting into the chair, the team will spend literally hours speaking with them on the phone first,” Sue says. “On the day, a group of our people will lovingly walk them in, supporting them every step of the way.”

The level of need within New Zealand surprised Marty, much of it surpassing what he has since seen in subsequent outreaches to isolated islands in the Pacific. “Within three days of starting a clinic here, we had hundreds of people on a waiting list,” he says. “Once we became aware of the scale of need, we knew we had to continue this work.”

"What drives me is seeing transformations in people – physical and emotional.
We offer a hand up, rather than a handout."

Sue Cole 

July 2022 saw the ship finally able to travel internationally, with four months spent stationed in Fiji. There, hundreds of locals received free health screenings and dental treatment. Marty tells the story of one woman with high blood pressure who was advised to change her diet, get some exercise and to cut back on a few indulgences. Two weeks later she returned, requesting her blood pressure be retested as she had implemented these changes. Incredibly, it had gone from dangerously high to normal. 

Partnering with local agencies if of great importance to YSA. “The key for us is to facilitate training and empower local workers – not just come in and do the services,” explains Marty. “Our main focus is around monitoring health and diet – small things that make a big difference.” The whakatoukī that best sums up their approach is “Nā tō rourou, nā taku rourou ka ora ai te iwi – With your food basket and my food basket, together the people will flourish and thrive.” 

Everyone involved with YSA is a volunteer. The greater operational costs are covered by financial assistance from companies such as Trinity Lands, Bay Trust, TECT, Good Neighbour and Bid Foods, while private sponsorship is employed by individuals for their personal living costs. For Sue, Marty and team, it is more than worth it.

Sue recalls one of many cases that make what they do so worthwhile. “Recently a young woman was frustrated she couldn’t find a job, despite being skilled. She was missing her front tooth and lacked confidence from that,” she explains. “Our dentists restored the tooth, and the woman was over the moon. The shame she’d felt had gone.”

Moving forward, Marty says that by operating more dental clinics in the Bay, the Waikato, and in the Pacific, they want to eradicate high dental needs in these areas and help as many people as they can. “We’re not afraid to dream big!” 

Ywamshipsaotearoa.org.nz

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