The last time I wrote a blog, an unconscionable number of months ago, we had recently arrived here to Bocas del Toro and I ended the blog excited by what might be possible over the coming months…now those coming months have passed, and it is time to catch everyone up and take stock of what we have accomplished here in.
6 months ago feels like a million years ago…with more long-term volunteers, we’ve been able
to really expand some parts of our project, including self-surveillance. I looked at what we had done—how many mobile clinics, how many volunteers, how many projects, how many patients…it is overwhelming to try and describe. I should either write bullet points, or a 3-volume novel to describe everything since my last update.
Over most of our time here, for example, for every 3 days we were here, we ran one day of mobile clinic work—even counting rained-out days (and it rains 150 inches a year here) and days we were involved in any other kind of activity, whether it was working on boat projects, escorting patients to the mainland to get treatment, holding office hours in our consultorio, working in the asilo, eating, sleeping, or doing anything else. We’ve seen over 3,000 patients in more than 17 communities that we visit on a roughly 2-month rotation across the entire province of Bocas (an area of over 4,500 square kilometers), in addition to all our other activities.
No matter what other projects we get involved in, the core of Floating Doctors is our mobility—even the permanent clinics we are now working to establish are to serve as bases from which to continually run mobile clinics by panga, as we have done everywhere we go. I’m incredibly proud of all my volunteers and my crew for maintaining that level of dedication to work one day of mobile clinic for every 3 days we were here.
We’ve seen a lot of different communities, and noticed that there are enormous clusterings of health issues in different small communities that at a glance may seem similar. Why does one community have an incredibly high rate of obesity and diabetes, while the neighboring community has no obesity or diabetes but has lots of parasites? We have gathered detailed demographic and health data on over 550 patients so far, community assessments on a dozen different communities, and are beginning focused projects based on issues we have prioritized based on the data so far. Results of our first survey project coming in the new year…
We’ve started doing overnight and multi-day mobile clinics—getting two or more clinic days for the price of one day’s travel, since our accommodations have almost always been in the homes of local members of the community, or expats who notify the community that we are coming, house and feed our team, and often allow us to use their facilities to hold our clinic and arrange our transport to work in communities near their homes. I have been overwhelmed by the generosity of the expat and local community here…I have never worked anywhere—in the developing or the developed world—where the community at every level will actually deliver on its promises of support like here. From the Mayor sending trucks to help us cart garbage out of the nursing home, and letting us use his old consulting room to open for patient consults two days a week to the local marina workers who are giving their Sunday to help drive 36 10-foot posts into stinking mud to build a wheel-chair walkway, this is a wonderful community, with many eccentric people (after all, we are here too) and many people with good hearts who have shown us enormous kindness and support for our work here. Thank you to everyone—this is what makes Floating Doctors possible. A thousand hands holding us afloat…
We’ve also joined forces with the Peace Corps volunteers scattered throughout the province;

Harold, Peace Corps worker in Shark Hole; we did a clinic there on his very last day on site...a giant amongst his Ngobe friends; thank you Harold for your fantastic work
Peace corps Volunteers have thus far been 100% reliable—individual peace corps volunteers live (very often alone) in a community and work on a project. We got in contact with one, on the mainland, and ran a mobile clinic at his village…it is so awesome to arrive with everyone notified, a place to work, directions, someone to help interpret and to give us the inside scoop on patients we are meeting for the first time, someone to pre-arrange accommodation in the community, and best of all, the Peace Corps volunteers can and do follow up with patients that we have identified as needing more advanced care. This has been our experience with the Peace Corps every time we have worked with them, and we look forward to our upcoming multiday clinics to some new communities we are visiting through Peace Corps, including a Ngobe community way up in the mountains that I have heard a Peace Corps volunteer visited but that he thinks has NEVER been visited by a medical team. Looking forward to that later this week…
- A nice big area for a mobile clinic
- ultrasounding in a chair in the jungle
- our parking space at a mobile clinic
- instant hemoglobin from the hemocue
- calcium deficiency?
- excising a ganglion cyst in Bahia Azul
- excising a ganglion cyst in Bahia Azul
- excising a ganglion cyst in Bahia Azul
- checking for malunion of a broken elbow
- the first part of our journey to mobile clinics on the mainland
- man i’d hate to walk into this at face height
- I’m actually kind of wondering where we are, exactly, but they don’t yet know that
- Family consults
- It is beautiful…
- The babies like Dr. Mark’s big white beard
- Saying hi to our clinic neighbor
- Las Tablas Ngobe moms
- Las Tablas Ngobe mom
- para controllar fiebvre
- saw more than 350 people that day in Rio Oestre
- cute in the traditional nagua dress
- mobile clinic Haitian style
- Canadian medical student doing kids health checks
- Dr. Mark, the Jungle GP of Tierra Oscura
- Dr. Mark, local expat, helps in our clinics
- Dr. Mark and a healthy looking baby
- Barney seems so intent in this picture
- I need an opthamologist
- I need an opthamologist
- Dr. Barney in action
- Dr. Barney doing health checks on kids
- Fungus? Can’t wait till Holly gets here (tommorow night!)
- Amelia at the helm 10 miles offshore coming from Bahia Azul
- In Bahia Azul as in Haiti, always the attendant canoes
- A box of medicine from Direct Relief International
- I love pediatrics
- Sky de-worming in Drago
- I love this picture…such a typical moment when all is going well in a good mobile clinic
- I love my sister
- Llamelar icthyosis? Several cases in the province, in familes….
- Mobile clinic in conjunction with the Mayor’s government team visit to San Cristobal
- Look what I found outside the clinic in Rio Oestre
- NP Malia checking a throat
- Harold, Peace Corps worker in Shark Hole; we did a clinic there on his very last day on site…a giant amongst his Ngobe friends; thank you Harold for your fantastic work
- Cutest kids ever
- Sometimes you find patients at the end…
- A seldom-used consultorio for government doctors in Bahia Azul….our Surgery
- Bringing in his baby brother at Drago
- Antibiotics for a bad chest infection
- Mobile pharmacy
- a momentary connection between two worlds…
- Our patients at San Cristobal
- ‘Peace Corps Kate’ on Isla Popa 2 is awesome; she always does awesome prep before our clinics and is a wealth of information
- Burn? Rash? Yet another strange tropical presentation…






























































Great post, thanks for updating. Do you all have any kind of specific schedule. How can we know where the clinics are? We have some Gnobe friends that we need to bring in to a clinic.
Everyday at my work somebody at some point says, relax ” it’s not like we are saving the world”. I’m so impressed you never get to say that! You guys are doing such amazing deeds, it will be such an honor to join you for a little bit!
Really happy to know the work you docs do…… All the best floating doctors.