The American ‘Doctor Strange’ of
Vietnam
An American physiotherapist
has given up her home and career in the U.S. to realize her dream of helping
patients in Vietnam.
Virginia Mary Lockett helps a
patient exercise at the Da Nang Hospital of Traditional Medicine in Da Nang
City.Tuoi Tre
At
2:00 pm on a Tuesday afternoon, a young woman was admitted to the Da Nang
Hospital of Traditional Medicine in Da Nang City.
The
22-year-old patient had been unable to move her legs since a traffic accident
that nearly killed her three months earlier.
Doctors
at the hospital conducted an examination of her condition, despite the
patient’s emotional distress and lack of cooperation throughout the process.
Then
a tall foreign woman dressed in a white coat sat down beside the weeping
patient, held her hand, looked straight into her eyes and asked in
Vietnamese: “Does it hurt?”
After
a long conversation through an interpreter, the young woman eventually calmed
down and was handed a jar of lotion to be applied to her legs where it hurt.
“It’s
psychotherapy,” said Ha Thi Nhung, a technician at the hospital. “She always
gets to know her patients before learning about their conditions. She gives
them trust and hope through her eyes and gestures.”
For
the past seven years, Nhung and her colleagues at the Da Nang Hospital of
Traditional Medicine have become used to the expert bedside manner of
64-year-old U.S. physiotherapist Virginia Mary Lockett, who has been a
volunteer to provide professional support for patients in Vietnam for nearly
a decade.
The haunting tears
First
arriving in Vietnam in 1995, her first reason for coming was to adopt a child
with her husband.
It
was by chance that the couple’s interpreter at the time learned of Lockett’s
profession and invited her to his home in order to recommend some therapeutic
exercise for his paralyzed father.
According
to Lockett, the interpreter’s father had had his femur broken in a traffic
accident, but had suffered complications that led to paralysis in his arms
and legs, something which was put down to the lack of appropriate training
for local doctors at the time.
She
recalled telling the interpreter that his father would not have been in a situation
like that had he been treated in the U.S.
Both
the interpreter and his father burst into tears on hearing her words, the
tears that haunted Lockett well after she returned to the U.S.
It
was those very tears that prompted her to go back to Vietnam ten years later
as a volunteer of Health Volunteers Overseas (HVO), a Washington
DC-based non-profit dedicated to improving the availability and quality
of healthcare in resource-scarce countries.
As
an expert in physiotherapy, Lockett spent three weeks working with doctors at
a functional rehabilitation center in Da Nang, where she helped train the
technicians.
However,
the brief volunteer program was far from enough to deliver what the devoted
Lockett needed to make real changes.
Virginia Mary Lockett (second right) gives training to technicians at
the Da Nang Hospital of Traditional Medicine in Da Nang City. Photo: Tuoi Tre
Resettlement
Lockett
went back to the U.S. after those three weeks with the belief that her
expertise was needed more in Vietnam than in America, and that her being in
Vietnam would mean so much more to those patients.
After
traveling back and forth between the two countries, the exhaustion and
expense eventually gave way to the idea of settling down permanently in
Vietnam, a decision that received the full support of her husband.
Her
firstborn and first adopted child were already old enough to take care of
themselves, while she thought it would do no harm for her other Vietnamese
adoptee to live in his home country.
It
took no time at all for the couple to go follow-through on their decision,
and in the summer of 2006, Lockett and her husband sold their house and
traveled across the ocean to Vietnam on a travel visa.
Prior
to selling their home, Lockett had written a letter to the ambassador of
Vietnam in Washington D.C., asking whether she could work long-term as a
medical expert in Vietnam.
When
she received the ambassador’s response that advised her to go and work for a
non-governmental organization, she decided to found her own.
Steady
Footsteps was founded with the goal of providing assistance to the disabled
in Vietnam, with the three founding members being the couple and their
Vietnamese interpreter Nguyen Huu Huy.
“They
have great hearts, a frugal lifestyle and an unconditional willingness to do
their best for the benefit of the patients,” Huy said. “They find joy in
seeing their patients being treated free of charge.”
According
to Nguyen Van Anh, the director of the Da Nang Hospital of Traditional
Medicine, Lockett has brought new life to the hospital’s physiotherapy unit
since she started working there as a volunteer.
The
number of patients seeking physiotherapeutic treatment has increased to the
point that expansions have had to be made, Anh said.
“For
many years Virginia has worked the hours of any other employee without taking
any days off despite her being a volunteer,” he added. “I even heard that she
had once been warned of having her pension terminated for staying outside of
the U.S. for too long. We have also offered to provide financial support by
paying for her interpreter, but she rejected the idea right away.”
For
Lockett, what she has done in Vietnam over the past ten years has been what
she had wanted to do since graduating from medical school.
TUOI TRE
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Thứ Ba, 4 tháng 7, 2017
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