When someone asks where you plan on traveling this year, odds are good Guatemala is not on the itinerary. But for nearly three decades, thats exactly what two local doctors have been doing, using their skills to help restore vision to people in need.
Dr. Christopher Wallyn and Dr. Michael Merck are ophthalmologists at Regional Eye Center in Hutchinson. They met while in training together at Rush-Presbyterian-St. Lukes Medical Center in Chicago. Both were married with young families, and both were Catholic, so pairing them together as residents was a natural fit.
Our faith really, they could tell, motivated much of how we looked at our lives, Wallyn said.
It was also the doctors faith that led them to accept an offer that would change their lives. In the early 1990s, the Rev. Greg Schaffer, a priest for the Diocese of New Ulm, invited Wallyn and Merck to visit Guatemala, where Schaffer had worked at the mission parish in San Lucas Toliman since 1963.
He invited us to come and see because both of us had said that we would like to do mission work, Wallyn said. That was one of our goals.
It was the personal invitation of the late Father Greg Schaffer that led to my commitment to begin the work of bringing surgical eye care to the area, Merck said about the two doctors first trip to Guatemala. He so generously offered to host me and my family. And he extended the kind of hospitality that made it impossible for us to refuse to make that initial trip.
On their first visit, Wallyn and Merck quickly realized how difficult the living situation was for the people of Guatemala. Most families lived in one-room homes with dirt floors and tin roofs. Malnutrition is also a serious threat for young children. With so many concerns, eye care was often neglected.
People went blind and that was part of life, Wallyn said.
But while life is tough in Guatemala, Wallyn and Merck were inspired by the culture and reverence for elderly people. Grandparents are an important part of a family and often live together with multiple generations. And while the older generations want to contribute to the family with tasks such as collecting fire wood, cooking and cleaning, they cant do that if they cant see.
Coming from North America, coming from this country that has so much, learning what people lived under and trying to help where we could, which was really trying to help people with their eyes, from that point we decided that we were gonna try to address the needs of the people in this area, Wallyn said.
From then on, Wallyn and Merck became regulars in Guatemala. Their trips started in 1992 and usually last 7-10 days. On average the doctors said they see about 120 patients per day, many often with cases of neglected cataracts requiring surgery.
Some we can help by just giving them explanations, Wallyn said, some people by just giving them eye drops, some people by giving them the opportunity to have surgery.
Now almost 30 years later, the doctors continue their trips, sometimes as many as two to three times per year. In 2000, the doctors established a nonprofit organization to help their mission called The Foundation For Saving Sight.
While the need for eye care remains, the conditions have somewhat improved. The doctors now have a full operating room with equipment that allows them to complete cataract and glaucoma surgery. Theyve also earned the trust of the locals.
We've gone from people being very superstitious about eye surgery and superstitious about what we're all about to trusting us and understanding who we are and what we are there to do, Wallyn said.
Their work has also attracted other eye care groups from St. Louis, Texas and Seattle that help with the mission.
Here we are trying to address mature cataracts with modern-day surgery, Wallyn said. The end result is, a person goes from blindness to being able to see, which is dramatic, life changing.
Just as dramatic as restoring a persons vision, however, is giving patients the knowledge and understanding of an issue with which theyve had to live.
I've found it can be equally moving to be able help a patient who is plagued with the uncertainty and lack of understanding they have of their disabling eye condition, Merck said. to be able to answer for them the haunting questions that they and their loved ones have lived with for too long, not knowing whether they are neglecting or have neglected a treatable problem or not, and then witness their gracious acceptance of their difficult circumstances when they learn it is permanent and untreatable.
On Thursday, Wallyn departs for his latest trip to Guatemala and is scheduled to return Feb. 16. Mercks next trip is scheduled for the fall.
While the two plan to continue their mission, theyve inspired others to join them. Mercks son, Joseph, started attending the trips with his father as a child. He is also a certified ophthalmologist now and helps perform surgeries and other procedures. Merck's three daughters, all nurses, also accompany the group to Guatemala and assist with the work.
Katie Wallyn also started her own project called LEAST, which stands for Loving the Elderly and Satisfying His Thirst and helps feed elderly people in San Lucas.
There are also plans to develop a mentorship program with the University of Minnesota to bring residents in training along to Guatemala so they may experience life on a mission trip.
If others are looking to donate either through money or service, they can visit through foundation.regeycenter.com for more information about the organization.
It's wonderful to have people able to participate and be part of that process, Wallyn said, because we couldn't do it just by ourselves.
Its been 28 years since their first trip, and although the Rev. Greg Schaffer is gone he died in 2012 his work and love for Guatemala live on in Wallyn and Merck, and continues to spread down to new generations of missionaries.
Part of my life, and Dr. Merck's the same way, is for us to never just consider that working in a medical practice in central Minnesota would be a sufficient answer to the gifts that we were given, Wallyn said, that there would be more to it than that.
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Two Hutchinson doctors are on a mission to save sight and change lives in Guatemala - Crow River Media
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