Las Vegas Review-Journal

Volunteers help at home, abroad

Retirees at Pennsylvan­ia faith-based nonprofit refurbish medical equipment to donate

- By Greg Wohlford Erie Times-news

ERIE, Pa. — Since 1969, Chosen Internatio­nal Medical Assistance has provided refurbishe­d medical equipment to help communitie­s and individual­s.

Enter the workshop at Chosen Internatio­nal and you’ll hear grinding metal and the pounding of a ballpeen hammer.

Seven or eight men, mostly retired, gather a few days each week at the workshop in Millcreek Township, near Erie Internatio­nal Airport southwest of downtown Erie, to rebuild and refurbish used medical equipment that is then used in mission trips around the globe.

“These look like junk when they come in here,” Bob Corey said as he removed the door on a 60-inch sterilizer. Corey, 83, is a Steris retiree.

Nearby, volunteer Ralph Edes, 62, cleans pipe fittings. “I like to work with my hands,” said Edes, who is a GE Transporta­tion retiree.

Tool-and-die maker Bruce Platz, 58, oversees the work of refurbishi­ng the sterilizer­s, some of which might have been built in Erie.

“We’ve supplied surgical tables, sterilizer­s and lights to places such as Haiti and Sierra Leone, 110 countries in all,” Platz said. He’s planning a mission trip to Mexico with Edes that will be his seventh or eighth time helping out in remote areas of the world. The men plan to drill and build a water well for a community there.

“We acquire the sterilizer­s when Steris customers trade in their old ones,” said Jeff Mazza, community outreach facilitato­r at Chosen Internatio­nal Medical Assistance. “We can’t distribute in the U.S. or markets that compete with Steris, so that’s how the mission trips evolved.”

“Typically clients pay a reduced fee for the sterilizer­s,” Mazza added. “Usually we send a staff member and volunteer to install the equipment and provide training.”

Chosen Internatio­nal is a faithbased nonprofit founded in 1969 in Millcreek.

One area that has grown steadily is the home health-care program, which provides items such as wheelchair­s, walkers, shower chairs and other items at no cost. On average, more than 150 pieces of medical equipment are provided each month, Mazza said. The amount of equipment refurbishe­d for the home

health-care program more than doubled since 2015, he said.

“Unfortunat­ely we turn away about 30 people each month because

 ?? Greg Wohlford ?? Erie Times-news via AP Chosen Internatio­nal Medical Assistance volunteer Jack Dematteo, 70, left, gets set to paint a sterilizer to be donated abroad. In foreground, discarded stainless steel railings from a local business await their renewal.
Greg Wohlford Erie Times-news via AP Chosen Internatio­nal Medical Assistance volunteer Jack Dematteo, 70, left, gets set to paint a sterilizer to be donated abroad. In foreground, discarded stainless steel railings from a local business await their renewal.

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