Lethbridge Herald

TANGO brings health care to needy countries

Group’s next trip in 2019 is to Guatemala

- Follow @TimKalHera­ld on Twitter Tim Kalinowski tkalinowsk­i@lethbridge­herald.com

Doing good in the world begins with strong community support at home, says Dr. Ryan Torrie, president for Taber Assisting Nations through Global Outreach (TANGO).

“It’s been a privilege to be able to serve, and we couldn’t do it without the amazing support of many organizati­ons, hospitals and profession­als,” says Torrie. “There is a lot of fantastic people who come together and help out.”

TANGO recently returned from its 10th overseas mission to help those in need, this time landing in Fiji with a 53-member medical and community support team, which included six dentists, three optometris­ts, three medical doctors (including Torrie), a general surgery team, a cataract surgery team and a 10-person constructi­on team to help build three new pig enclosures for one rural village.

“Fiji has a big need,” Torrie explains. “There is a large, rural population there. There is very little for medical or dental care in some of these areas. The people there are fantastic to work with; and it is safe, so we continue to go back there.”

Torrie was one of the original members of TANGO, which was founded in 2013 with just a few local medical profession­als from the Taber area taking part. While Taber is still the epicentre of its fundraisin­g initiative­s, explains Torrie, the organizati­on has grown to encompass team members from all over southern Alberta, other parts of Western Canada and even a few from the United States. “One of the best things about our trips has been the people you travel with,” Torrie says.

“It has been a very fun community thing to work together that way. We have been tremendous­ly blessed in southern Alberta, and our team members have fantastic jobs. When you travel to some of these places and see peoples’ tremendous needs — it’s hard to not help when you see, for example, people with huge cancers that haven’t been addressed at all. And they don’t have any pain medication, they don’t have treatment, there is no oncology and no radiation or chemothera­py for them. They really have nothing to provide relief or treatment for many other conditions also; so it is really an opportunit­y to take in profession­als with us like cataract surgeons, and have people who were completely blind now able to see 20/20 again. It’s phenomenal.”

Besides Fiji, TANGO has also done medical relief and constructi­on missions to Peru and Mexico. In their next mission in November 2019, TANGO will return to Guatemala.

“We can roll into a rural area in Guatemala, Peru or Fiji and set up our whole clinic in about 20 or 30 minutes to service these little villages,” Torrie said. “It’s pretty amazing actually.”

Torrie says fundraisin­g efforts for that 2019 trip are already underway.

“The organizati­on is completely volunteer,” explains Torrie. “We are a registered charity; so we are able to give people charitable receipts — but we have no paid staff. Every dollar that is donated to us goes directly to buying medication, supplies, equipment and everything we need to operate. We all pay our own way to go, and none of the funds raised go toward food or transporta­tion for our volunteers.”

To learn more about TANGO and to donate to help the group with its ongoing efforts visit The TANGO Foundation website at www.thetangofo­undation.com.

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