Larry Nichter
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Spiders, vampire bats, anacondas and other creatures of the wild
Amazon didn’t seem to worry Larry Nichter as much as the grief and
tribulations of the people who inhabited the hostile habitat.
The Newport Beach plastic surgeon has traveled to poverty-stricken
nations all over the world through Plasticos, a traveling team of
doctors, nurses and coordinators who volunteer their time and pay for
these trips to perform corrective surgeries on people who cannot
afford such treatments.
Nichter founded the group four years ago, but has been going on
these trips for several years, all of them on his own time and
expense. He has trekked to Ecuador, Guatemala, Vietnam, Micronesia,
Palau, Philippines, Thailand, Sri Lanka , Mexico and the Honduras.
Why does he do it?
“Everyone goes into medicine for humanitarian reasons,” he said.
“We become doctors because we like helping people. But this is an
experience that’s hard to describe. It recharges your batteries and
you’re exposed to a lot of the realities of the world.”
Nichter and his team not only help cure their patients’ physical
deformities, but also teach their craft to local doctors in those
developing nations.
“That’s a very important part of our work,” he said. “One of our
goals is to help them become self-sufficient.”
The trips are not exotic vacations. They each last at least 10
days -- mostly grueling days when the team performs at least a dozen
surgeries a day, most of them under unimaginable conditions and
circumstances.
The challenges come from the rough topography of the regions as
well.
“We’ve had to wade across rivers sometimes to reach the remote
areas,” said Nichter.
But it’s been worth it every time, he says. Sometimes, they have
found a crowd of a 100 people who waited in the rain for two days
straight to consult with the doctors. Most of Nichter’s patients are
children with severe birth defects such as cleft lips, webbed feet or
hands and those with burn injuries.
One of them was 12-year-old Marcelo Katani, a denizen of the deep
Amazon who was burned during a fire that occurred when he was left
alone with his three brothers and sisters in their thatched hut. Two
of his siblings died in the blaze and Marcelo, then a 5-month-old
infant, suffered severe burns on his arm and lost the ability to
extend his elbow or raise his shoulder. Nichter was able to release
the scar tissue enabling Marcelo to use his arm, elbow and shoulder
normally.
Watching his patients enjoy their new look and do things they’ve
never done before has been rewarding for Nichter.
“When you see the expression on their faces, it’s one of
disbelief,” he said. “It’s as if a miracle has happened to them.”
-- Compiled by Deepa Bharath
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