Physical Therapist (Honduras)
Honduras
Durations of Program: 3-6 months, 7-12 months and 1-2 years
Typical Duration of Program: 7-12 months
Description:
This physical therapist would work in Casa de los Angeles, our special needs home, providing therapy for 14 children between the ages of two to 22, and living in our capital city of Tegucigalpa. This position would be for a minimum of six months but could last as long as 13 months. The home includes two new therapy rooms--one for sensory therapy and the other for occupational therapy. The PT working in this home would have regular therapy sessions with each of the children, be responsible for charting the children's progress, evaluating changing therapy needs and planning new therapies accordingly. The therapist would collaborate closely with the Casa de Los Angeles caregiver staff, medical staff, and year of service students to provide the best possible care for our children. The main tasks of the physiotherapist are improving the posture, maintaining the flexibility and muscle tone, making and applying flexible splints and instructing the personnel working with our special needs children. As our children come from many varied backgrounds, their needs vary greatly. We have under our care children with mental and physical disabilities, those who have suffered from polio, those who are blind and/or deaf and children who have had limbs amputated. Also, sometimes we have serious patients who are either sent by the doctor or who come on their own, mostly after an accident. The oldest homes (Mexico and Honduras) have fully equipped physical therapy rooms. Thanks to the commitment of several prior colleagues, there are big therapy balls, bars for walking, swings and various other therapy tools to be used. While the facilities and equipment might not be as complete in the other homes, the needs still exist with the children. Creativity and resourcefulness are essential skills for physiotherapists working in any of our homes. The physiotherapist is often called upon to treat big and small aches and hurts. From a sprained finger, to bony ankles to a post bone fracture treatment to rib contusions, there are always children in need of attention. We provide the children with flexible bandages, mobilize stiff joints and provide care for the best possible rehabilitation and prevention of new injuries. Prevention is often the primary goal of the physiotherapists. In some homes, extensive exams have been performed on the children from an orthopedic point of view in order to diagnose possible weaknesses at a young age and start the treatment as early as possible. The youngest children of our NPH family also receive their treatment. As a result of former severe malnutrition or AIDS, many of our small children are developmentally delayed. Their physical progress is assessed and exercises prescribed for their caregivers to improve the motor-sensory development.
Highlights:
One hour from the nation's capital, Rancho Santa Fe is a thriving community. Almost 600 boys and girls reside in this little village nestled among the hills of the Honduras countryside. Sprinkled throughout the lovely pines are the homes of the NPH Honduras community. The youngest residents, boys and girls six years old and under, live in Casa Suyapa. On a hot summer day, a wading pool may be set up in its central courtyard and groups of little ones wait eagerly for their turn to jump in and splash around. Unique to the Honduras family is Casa Pasionista, belonging to the Order of Passionist Priests. Casa Pasionista is a hospice for adults who are living in the final stages of AIDS. Ailing parents can be with their children as their health deteriorates, comforted by the knowledge that after their death, the children will have a secure home with NPH. Another special home is Casa Eva, where the grandparents live. They are elderly adults who had no family to care for them until they came to NPH. These elders make the large family more complete. The pequeños can often be found chatting or walking with the seniors. In addition to the care the children give to others, they contribute to their own well being by attending classes in the airy rooms of the on-site kinder, primary and secondary schools. Some of the children's dreams are simpler; they long to walk, to speak, and to feed themselves. Casa de Los Ángeles, located in Tegucigalpa, houses the children with multiple, severe disabilities. Here, both temporary and permanent medical care and physical therapy is provided for the disabled children. An open-air auditorium was built entirely by pequeños with the technical assistance of a local craftsman. On days of celebration, the area is filled with folding chairs made by the pequeños in the vocational workshops. All of our homes' fixtures and furniture are made by our youths. Pequeños who receive three years of vocational training and obtain their certification have little difficulty finding jobs.
Qualifications:
* Licensed Physical Therapist * Experience working with children. * Comfortable working in another culture. * High levels of patience and flexibility. Friends of the Orphans International Volunteers must be 21, and we prefer that they speak Spanish and/or Creole. Volunteers serve for at least a year in one of the 9 NPH homes. NPH offers room and board, plus a monthly stipend (US$50-$100, depending on the home), and access to health care. Volunteers are responsible for paying for their travel to/from the country, medical insurance and language school fees (if necessary). Successful volunteers are cooperative, flexible and extremely patient. They have strong work ethics and are able to work with people from many different cultures.
Minimum Education: Diploma/Certification
Cost in US$: 0.00
Cost Include Description:
Room and board is provided for all volunteers. Volunteers are expected to pay travel expenses to and from the country where volunteering.
Salary / Pay: Volunteers are paid a stipend that ranges from US $50- $100.
Experience Required: no
Typical Volunteer: The most effective volunteers come to NPH with a positive life-loving attitude, a strong work ethic, flexibility, realism and a sense of humor. Typically, volunteers may arrive with the expectation that living conditions are more primitive than they are. However, they are often not aware of how hard they are expected to work.
We also seek candidates whose main motive is to help the children and be models. NPH volunteers are not rebellious to rational authority, disrespectful or insensitive to the cultures where we work and are guests. Affluent Europeans and North Americans can afford to be rebels, with long hair, tattoos and pierced body parts. In Latin America, this kind of self presentation can ruin chances for a job.
Please remember, we accept volunteers only if we are convinced that they will be good for the children. We are not judging them as people, only as models for children who need to be prepared for their lives beyond NPH.
We have numerous openings for long-term volunteers throughout the year. We are sometimes able to accommodate volunteer groups such as school and church or youth organizations for short-term volunteering as well. See our Volunteer Requirements, Volunteer Opportunities, or proceed directly to our Volunteer Application.
If you are interested in helping NPH in your local community, please contact your nearest local fundraising office to find out how you can become involved. There are always positions available for translators, special event staff and office support. Working in your local office is a great way to get to know NPH better.
Age Range: 21+
This Program is open to
World Wide
Participants.
This Program is also open to
Families, Couples and Individuals
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Typical Living Arrangements :
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Participants Travel to Honduras
Independently
Typically Participants Work
Independently
Or
in Groups
Application Process Involves:
- In-Person Interview when Feasible
- Online Application plus Application Assessment
- Phone Interview
- Physical Exam/Health Records
- Resume
Friends of the Orphans's Mission Statement: Friends of the Orphans is a non-profit organization whose mission is to provide funds and awareness for Nuestros Pequeños Hermanos (NPH)- Spanish for Our Little Brothers and Sisters. NPH serves orphaned and abandoned children in 9 countries in Latin America: Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Peru, Bolivia, Haiti and the Dominican Republic. NPH's mission is to provide shelter, food, clothing, healthcare and education in a family environment based on unconditional love. A worldwide community of donors, staff and volunteers enable NPH to help the children become caring and productive citizens in their countries.
Year Founded: 1954
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