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Home General

God’s Doctors

July 29, 2024
in General
God’s Doctors
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In rural Virginia, religious and community groups are filling cavities, treating diabetes, and stepping into a health-care void.

A portrait of Father Markorieos Ava Mina, a patient at CrossOver Healthcare Ministry, in Richmond, Virginia, on Thursday, June 1, 2023.Father Markorieos Ava Mina, a patient at CrossOver Healthcare Ministry, in Richmond, Virginia. June 1, 2023.

Nearly 20 million people gained health-insurance coverage between 2010 and 2016 under the Affordable Care Act. But about half of insured adults worry about affording their monthly premiums, while roughly the same number worry about affording their deductibles. At least six states don’t include dental coverage in Medicaid, and 10 still refuse to expand Medicaid to low-income adults under the ACA. Many people with addiction never get treatment.

Religious groups have stepped in to offer help—food, community support, medical and dental care—to the desperate.

Over nine months last year, the photographer Matt Eich documented the efforts of five such organizations in his home state of Virginia. These groups operate out of trailers and formerly abandoned buildings; they are led by pastors and nuns, reverends and imams. In many cases, they are the most trusted members of their communities, and they fill care gaps others can’t or won’t. —Bryce Covert

The Health WagonWise, VirginiaA doctor visits with a patient in The Health Wagon Office in Wise, Virginia on Tuesday, March 14, 2023. A doctor visits with a patient at the Health Wagon in Wise, Virginia. March 14, 2023.

The Health Wagon is the oldest mobile free clinic in the country. It was founded in 1980 by Sister Bernie Kenny, a Catholic nun and nurse practitioner, who first offered care out of a Volkswagen Beetle. Today it has four mobile units that operate out of RVs, plus two buildings that offer medical and dental care. It plans to soon open the first nonprofit pharmacy in the region.

This is Appalachia—the western tip of the state, near the Kentucky border. The place has been hit hard by the opioid crisis, and residents suffer from high rates of cardiovascular disease, mental-health problems, diabetes, asthma, and cancer. “We’re the Lung Belt, we’re the Heart Belt, we’re the Kidney-Stone Belt,” Teresa Owens Tyson, who has been with the clinic since its early days and is now its CEO, told me. Most of the people the Health Wagon serves either don’t have insurance or have such high copays and deductibles that they can’t afford to use their policies. Tyson said she’s seen lines of people 1,600 deep waiting at the clinic at 6 a.m. Dental services are in particularly high demand: A 12-year-old recently came in whose teeth were so decayed, the child already needed dentures.

Left: March 14, 2023 - Wise, Virginia. Dr. Robert Kilgore takes a dental impression for dentures at The Health Wagon Office in Wise, Virginia on Tuesday, March 14, 2023. Right: March 14, 2023 - Wise, Virginia. Dental impression for dentures at The Health Wagon Office in Wise, Virginia on Tuesday, March 14, 2023. Dr. Robert Kilgore takes a dental impression for dentures. March 14, 2023.Picture of a conference room at The Health Wagon in Wise, Virginia on Tuesday, March 14, 2023. A conference room at the Health Wagon. March 14, 2023.The RecLuray, VirginiaPicture of Audre King, Director of The REC (the former Andrew Jackson School) in Luray, Virginia on Friday, June 16, 2023.Audre King, Director of The REC in Luray, Virginia on Friday, June 16, 2023.

Reverend Audre King grew up in Luray. He went away to college, got married, and was living hours away in Northern Virginia when he says God told him in a dream to go back home and begin a ministry there.

He tried to buy a long-abandoned building on his childhood block, but no bank would give him a loan. Finally, the owner agreed to sell it to him for cheap if he used it to serve the community. Digging out all of the dirt and dead animals and hooking the place up to electricity and water took months, but in 2017, the Rec was up and running.

It now serves hundreds of hot meals in an area where many people live in motels without kitchens. It also provides mental-health programming, kids’ activities, a computer lab, and fitness classes. “Our goal is that anything, for whatever reason, the town or county can’t or won’t be able to fund—a resource they won’t provide—we want to be that help,” King told me.

All of its services are provided almost entirely by volunteers; the only person who gets paid is a bus driver who transports kids from their schools and homes to the Rec and back. King doesn’t take a salary for either the Rec or at the Eternal Restoration Church of God in Christ, where he serves as minister; he works for a gas company.

When he preaches at the church, he’s teaching the Gospel, he told me; but at the Rec, he’s “living the Gospel.” He pointed to Matthew 25:35–40: “For I was hungry and you gave me food … I was naked and you clothed me, I was sick and you visited me.”

Picture of Audre King guiding kids across Main Street in front of The REC (the former Andrew Jackson School) in Luray, Virginia before a group outing to a playground on Friday, June 16, 2023. Audre King guides kids across Main Street before a group outing to a playground on Friday, June 16, 2023.Picture of Audre King and Damon Mendez playing basketball with participants from The REC in Luray, Virginia on Friday, June 16, 2023. Audre King and Damon Mendez play basketball with participants from the REC. June 16, 2023Diptych showing lunch time at The REC and the REC buildingLeft: Lunch time at the REC. Right: Damon Mendez carries a speaker into the REC. June 16, 2023CrossOver Healthcare MinistryRichmond, VirginiaPicture of Marilyn Metzler, RN interacting with Father Markorieos Ava Mina at CrossOver Healthcare Ministry in Richmond, Virginia.Marilyn Metzler, a registered nurse who has volunteered for 27 years, speaks with Father Markorieos Ava Mina at CrossOver Healthcare Ministry in Richmond, Virginia. June 1, 2023.

Last fiscal year, CrossOver treated more than 6,700 patients, over half of whom came from other countries as immigrants and refugees. Most undocumented immigrants can’t access Medicaid; those who can may still struggle to navigate the complex health-care system, especially if English isn’t their first language. The interdenominational group runs two free clinics offering primary care as well as cardiology and pulmonology, OB-GYN care, dental and vision care, behavioral-health services, pediatric care for children over 3, and a low-cost pharmacy. CrossOver relies on more than 400 volunteers to see patients, and still can’t open up enough appointments for everyone who comes seeking care: “We turn away about 30 to 35 people a week,” Julie Bilodeau, the group’s CEO, told me.

Diptych showing CrossOver Healthcare Ministry in Richmond, VirginiaScenes from CrossOver Healthcare Ministry. June 1, 2023.Picture of Maria Santiago Morente receiving an ultrasound from Laurel Wallace, D.O., a volunteer at CrossOver Healthcare Ministry in Richmond, Virginia on Thursday, June 1, 2023. Maria Santiago Morente receives an ultrasound from Laurel Wallace, D.O., a volunteer at CrossOver Healthcare Ministry on Thursday, June 1, 2023.Adams Compassionate Healthcare Network

Chantilly, Virginia

About 10 years ago, Yahya Alvi applied for a job at the Adams Compassionate Healthcare Network, half an hour from Washington, D.C. The organization’s president told him that his dream was to open a free clinic. “That is my passion,” Alvi responded. He started by securing empty space at a nearby mosque and taking free equipment from a clinic that was giving it away. At the beginning, he employed only one doctor and himself, and the clinic was open just one day a week.

Today, it operates six days a week and has two paid nurse practitioners in addition to the two doctors. The clinic was founded by Muslims, but it accepts anyone without insurance or the money to pay for medical care, from anywhere in the country and practicing any religion. “Our religion says that all human beings are created by God almighty,” Alvi told me. “And all deserve equal treatment.”

Picture of ADAMS Compassionate Healthcare Network in Chantilly, VirginiaADAMS Compassionate Healthcare Network in Chantilly, Virginia. November 13, 2023.Picture of a patient receiving an eye examination from a volunteer doctor at ADAMS Compassionate Healthcare Network in Chantilly, Virginia.A patient receives an eye examination from a volunteer doctor at Adams. August 12, 2023.Left photograph showing Tori Finney, a volunteer, measuring a patient at ADAMS.  Right photograph showing Dr. Fathiya Warsame helping a patient at ADAMS Left: Tori Finney, a volunteer, measures a patient at Adams. August 12, 2023. Right: Dr. Fathiya Warsame helps a patient at Adams. November 13, 2023.Picture of Dr. Sadia Ali Aden, MD, Executive Director at ADAMS Compassionate Healthcare Network in Chantilly, VirginiaDr. Sadia Ali Aden, the executive director of Adams Compassionate Healthcare Network. November 13, 2023.Picture of ADAMS Compassionate Healthcare Network in Chantilly, VirginiaAdams Compassionate Healthcare Network. November 13, 2023.Madam Russell United Methodist

Saltville, Virginia

Picture of Pastor Lisa Bryant at Madam Russell Memorial United Methodist Church in Saltville, VirginiaPastor Lisa Bryant at Madam Russell Memorial United Methodist Church in Saltville, Virginia. March 13, 2023.

One day in 2021, Steve Hunt was on the side of the road, trying to hitchhike to a grocery store about seven miles from his home in Saltville, Virginia. Hunt had lost his sight a few years earlier, after an infection in his leg went septic and he fell and knocked his retinas loose. Lisa Bryant saw him when she pulled up at a stop sign. She’s a pastor, and she had just finished a service at one church and had to be at another in an hour. She was in a hurry. But just the week before, she had preached about Jesus calling his followers to bring the blind and suffering to him. She gave Hunt a ride.

The interaction came at a crucial time for Hunt. “I was at bottom at that point,” he told me. His house was strewn with glass shards because he kept breaking things. He was struggling with addiction. “Everything was falling down around me, mentally and emotionally,” he said. “I was asking God to kill me that day she picked me up.”

Instead, Hunt started going to the new 12-step program Bryant had started at her main church, Madam Russell United Methodist. “They just kind of pulled around me, supported me,” he said of the congregation. He’s helped Bryant expand that program, the only one in a town where opioid use is rife but all the addiction-recovery programs are oversubscribed. Bryant has also set up community-service opportunities at her church for people convicted of drug offenses, and is working to secure transitional housing for people dealing with addiction.

Bryant doesn’t think the point of being a Christian is just to get to heaven after death, but to see the kingdom of heaven on Earth, too. She’s realized that “giving these people a new community, a healthy community, is one of the best things we can do for them,” she said. “We all need each other. That’s just how we’re created.”

Picture of people gathering before a meeting of the Saltville 12 Step Recovery Group in the basement of Madam Russell Memorial United Methodist Church in Saltville, VirginiaPeople gather before a meeting of the Saltville 12 Step Recovery Group in the basement of Madam Russell Memorial United Methodist Church. March 13, 2023.Picture of Saltville, Virginia.Saltville, Virginia. March 13, 2023.

Support for this story was provided by the Magnum Foundation, in partnership with the Commonwealth Fund.

About the Authors

Matt Eich is a photographer residing in Virginia

>>> Read full article>>>
Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source : The Atlantic – https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2024/05/rural-virginia-healthcare-religious-community-photography/677525/?utm_source=feed

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