Unite For Sight Volunteer Abroad Opportunities: As Featured Weekly On CNN
Currently accepting applications for January 2008 through January 2009.  
Rolling application deadline - the first qualified applicants are accepted.  
Apply today!

Volunteer Abroad in Summer, Fall, Winter, or Spring: 
http://www.uniteforsight.org/intl_volunteer 
<http://www.uniteforsight.org/intl_volunteer>

Save Eyes and Lives.  Every Eye, A Life.
Those who are blind in Africa have a four times higher mortality rate
60-80% of children who become blind die within 1-2 years
80% of blindness is curable or preventable

How Do I Apply?  The application as well as complete details about Unite For 
Sight's international opportunities are available at 
http://www.uniteforsight.org/intl_volunteer/ 
<http://www.uniteforsight.org/intl_volunteer>

What is Unite For Sight's Mission? Unite For Sight is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit 
organization that empowers communities worldwide to improve eye health and 
eliminate preventable blindness.

Unite For Sight's work to prevent blindness and restore sight is featured 
weekly on CNN INTERNATIONAL from September 2007-August 2008

Who Is Eligible to Participate?: The Unite For Sight internship is open to 
individuals 18 years and older, and there is no upper age limit. Volunteers 
range from undergraduate students to medical students, public health students 
and professionals, nurses, physician's assistants, teachers and educators, 
Returned Peace Corps Volunteers, doctors, opticians, optometrists and 
ophthalmologists.

What Do Volunteers Do?: Volunteers receive hands-on clinical experience while 
assisting doctors in remote, rural villages.  Volunteers learn about 
international health and eye care, learn clinical skills while working with 
patients and doctors, and, in one program location, have an opportunity to 
perform cataract surgery on a goat's eye.

The goal of Unite For Sight and its partner eye clinics and communities is to 
create eye disease-free communities.  Unite For Sight's volunteers (local and 
visiting) work with partner eye clinics to provide eye care in communities 
without previous access.  The eye clinic's eye doctors and Unite For Sight 
volunteers jointly provide community-based screening programs in rural 
villages.  The clinic's eye doctors diagnose and treat eye disease in the 
field, and surgical patients are brought to the eye clinic for surgery.  
Patients receive free surgery funded by Unite For Sight so that no patient 
remains blind due to lack of funds.  Volunteers immediately see the joy on 
patients' faces when their sight is restored after years of blindness.  These 
memories last a lifetime.

While helping the community, volunteers are in a position to witness and draw 
their own conclusions about the failures and inequities of global health 
systems. It broadens their view of what works, and what role they can have to 
insure a health system that works for everyone and that leaves no person blind 
in the future.

What Do Volunteers Say?:

"During my volunteering experience, I realized that Unite for Sight's service 
is a campaign for the salvation of humanity that allows the light of compassion 
to shine through each of us. I believe it is this display of altruism and 
commitment that makes the organization's service so virtuous and treasured by 
both volunteers and patients. After all, making a difference in the world is 
not so difficult if only one would care enough to sacrifice a part of oneself 
in order to change the world for the better. My experience as a Unite for Sight 
volunteer has inspired me to dedicate my future career to serving 
underprivileged communities around the world."—Chiwing "Jessica" Qu, Yale 
University Student, Unite For Sight Volunteer in India 2007

"Without Unite for Sight, I cannot imagine how I could possibly have seen and 
learned so much as an undergraduate about medicine, other cultures, and my own 
desire and ability to make a difference in others' lives."--Charlotte Hogan, 
Georgetown University Student, Unite For Sight Volunteer in India 2006 and 
Ghana 2005

"I can honestly say that everything I learned in 3 years of medical school 
paled in comparison to the 3 week experience I had in Accra (Ghana) in October 
2007 as part of Unite For Sight.  The program provides volunteers with a unique 
and hands-on involvement -- being able to help out to the level of your 
training and comfort. My experience taught me that Ghanaian people are the 
friendliest people I have interacted with anywhere in the world, that ordinary 
people involved with Unite For Sight are making extraordinary differences, and 
that sitting in a classroom receiving a world-class education cannot match real 
life experiences while volunteering."--Varun Verma, UMDNJ Medical Student, 
Unite For Sight Volunteer in Accra, Ghana

_______________________________________________
telecentres mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman-new.greennet.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/telecentres
To unsubscribe, send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word UNSUBSCRIBE 
in the body of the message.

Reply via email to