My office has a women’s medical clinic on the first floor. All services are complimentary, which I think is pretty stellar for this part of the country and incredibly important for women in the region. I’m raising money to help my office buy new medical equipment for the clinic, and I hope you’ll watch the video below (or on YouTube) and consider helping.
Since I arrived in July of 2010 (wow, I’ve been here for a long time!) the clinic has offered gynecological services, including pelvic exams and contraception, for free. Last year, we acquired a mammogram machine from an American donor and we now offer breast and cervical cancer screening – again, complimentary – through the Georgian government’s National Screening Center. We have a laboratory and try to do as much work in-house as possible to lower our costs.
What’s so important about the work of the clinic is that it provides preventative care. It’s often said that women here go to the doctor twice in their lives: to deliver a baby and when a problem becomes too big to ignore. I can say, anecdotally, that this is entirely true. Our office is working to encourage annual screenings and check-ups so issues can be detected and dealt with before they reach the crisis stage.
Best of all, these preventative care services are free. I’ve talked about unemployment and the incredibly challenging economic situation here. Medical care is expensive, and while our doctor friend will occasionally accept pumpkins for payment, hospitals aren’t so flexible. Health care, especially for the female caregivers in the family, often falls to the bottom of the list of priorities.
The project I’ve written would help our medical staff so much. Our laboratory technician would have new slides, syringes and shipping containers. (Currently, to send a specimen or sample to Tbilisi, she wraps the slides in paper and hopes for the best, so you can imagine how many are contaminated, lost, broken, etc. Plus, the equipment she has is really, really old.) Our doctor would have a new sterilzing machine, so she could see more patients every day. Currently, patients must wait for her to clean equipment between appointments. Our mammogram technician would have a new table where she could develop and read the mammogram films, cutting response time from one month to ten days. The doctors told me that with these upgrades, they can see 40% more women each month.
Sean filmed me giving a short tour of our clinic, so you can see our space and meet our doctors and technicians. I hope you’ll watch. But before I send you there, I wanted to include a few statistics about women’s health in Georgia:
- Breast cancer is the leading cause of death among Georgian women aged 14-49.
- In 2009, 61% of cervical cancer cases and 58% of breast cancer cases were discovered in Stage 3 or 4.
- Georgia has the highest rate of abortions in the region, at 3.1 abortions per woman.
- Only 16% of Georgian women use modern contraceptives.
Below is the video tour of our clinic that Sean put together for me. (Please excuse my crazy facial expressions. I had no idea I was, well, so expressive.)
I hope that no one reading this will feel pressured or obliged to donate. However, if you do feel compelled to support my work here, and the efforts of the doctors and medical professionals in our clinic, I would be incredibly appreciative of your support, as would all my co-workers. Thank you in advance.
If you do choose to donate, you can do so here. My project is called “Preventative Health Care for Women: Improving Access and Quality.”
Finally, a big thanks to my mom, who helped me decipher all the technical medical language necessary to write this project. (For fun, you can imagine me, in my limited Georgian, talking to my director and trying to understand what exactly these pieces of equipment do. There was lots of breast-squeezing and drawing of ovaries, to be sure!)





























