I caught these three walking past the exam area at the Medical Outreach Response Event (MORE) on Sunday, March 17th.
Category Archives: Medical
How I Spent My Sunday, Part 2
A few more photos from Sunday’s Medical Response Outreach Event (MORE).
Danielle and Cory shared their stories with us. Danielle was compelling and her story would break your heart.
They both were willing to let me photograph their teeth so that we could convey to our elected officials the dire need for services in our community. For obvious reasons, I will not be posting those photographs here.
Jacqui is a home health care nurse. Neither she nor her husband are insured.
Davit has big dreams of making it one day.
Bette (pronounced Betty, she was quick to tell me!) brought her son in for a flu shot and gave me good-natured hell about taking her photo, yet when I asked if I could photograph her with her boys, she proudly sat between them. I’ve got a print all ready to send to her.
Waiting outside the dental van.
How I spent my Sunday
Long-time followers know that I photographed the first ever Medical Outreach Response Event (MORE) last year as my final project for my lighting class. They held the event again this past weekend and I volunteered to shoot the event. They already had a photographer for Saturday so I showed up yesterday. Sunday wasn’t as busy as Saturday, but there was still plenty of need. There are no medical services to speak of in our town. Many of these people are working poor, or disabled, and there are so many hurdles for them to jump over and so many cracks for them to fall through, that the problem feels insurmountable.
Here are just a few shots.
Attendees starting the process at intake. The clients were screened here and directed to the various areas, depending on their need.
They might need dental work, vision care, help with obtaining affordable insurance or low-cost prescription assistance. Or all of the above. There was also an immunization clinic to get people up-to-date on their shots, mental health screening, three dental vans, and the Mammovan was there to provide breast cancer screening.
People shouldn’t have to get their health care in the middle of a high school gymnasium or get their teeth fixed in the parking lot. My country has its priorities all screwed up.
They shouldn’t have to wonder if there is something . . . anything . . . they can afford.
A young boy attempts to read the eye chart as the Lions Club volunteer looks on.
Immunization clinic.
She’s a bit nervous.
But she came through with flying colors.
More to come.
Day 299 – Mended Heart
Kind of like mine. Held together with glue and paperclips.
In case you couldn’t tell, I went to the cardiologist today for my quarterly service check. Looks like I’ve got at least two more years of battery life left in my pacemaker. I wish it was more, but it’s been getting a pretty good workout, so probably not. Maybe by then they’ll have a pacemaker with a longer lifespan.
Day 139 – Final Project
I didn’t want to post this until the results were in. (And yes, the last photo was taken today). What follows are just thirteen of the approximately 400 photos I took of the event and the days leading up to it.
Final Project – ART 235
Medical Outreach Response Event
April 13 – 14, 2012
Silver Stage High School, Silver Springs, NV
Organizers and Volunteers
Christy (right) is the Director of the Healthy Communities Coalition. Freida (left) runs the Dayton Food bank and was the instigating force for the event. She wondered, What good did it do to give people food if they couldn’t chew it? Freida was the volunteer organizer and logistics person for the event.
Wendy organized the professionals (dentists, doctors, nurses, optometrists, etc). She is the head of Community Roots.
Rita was one of a couple hundred extraordinary volunteers. Here she is calling people who registered late for the event to let them know what services would be available.<

The Event – Friday, April 13 (12 – 5pm) & Saturday, April 14 (9am – 5pm)
Community Health Nurses consult with one another in preparation for the MORE event.
One of the dentists and his assistants heading out to the mobile dental van.
Wendy cannot contain her excitement after getting a look at the dental van. It really was amazing. It was a complete, modern dental office (five chairs) on wheels.
There were so many who needed dental work, that it was meted out via lottery tickets. On day one 8 numbers were drawn every half hour. The dentists did their best to keep up, but many clients with tickets had not been served by the end of the first day, so those patients came back the next day, as did anyone else who had a lottery ticket in the raffle can. There was no way all who needed help were going to be seen. And yet the people waited and hoped. Once their number was called, it was still a long wait and I saw some people who had been standing in line on Friday morning still waiting for dental treatment on Saturday at 4pm when I left , No one who was lucky enough to get their number called complained. They waited and waited and waited until they finally saw the dentist. And among those lucky enough to get their ticket pulled, well, in some cases they gave their place to someone else in their family whose needs were more urgent.
One client speaking to a volunteer at the lottery table.
Other services were also offered. Immunizations were by far the most popular after dental work.
We had optometrists on hand as well. The Lions Club volunteers did vision testing and screening, and prospective patients were sent back to the optometrists.
Dental work was, by far, the most requested and labor intensive service offered at MORE 2012.
Mark needed a filling in his front incisor.

Dr. Brad Munninger of Desert Valley Dental in Fernley worked his magic.
Mark’s reaction was pretty typical of all the dental patients. Big smiles, hugs, and even some tears.
“If I cannot eat, cannot smile, cannot kiss without pain, do you think I can work, attend school, participate in the normal affairs of my family, peers and community?”
~ Shaun Griffin
I was very proud to have done this project and I’m honored the organizers trusted me to do the event justice. I’m happy with the result, but more than that, I’m happy that the photographs I took will be used to influence support for further events of this type in the near future, and legislation and change in the coming years.
Icing on the cake:
Day 104 – Before and After
I’ve been at the Medical Outreach Response Event all day; and I will be there all day again tomorrow. I took a lot of pictures, and it will take me awhile to get through them all. By far the largest number of people who attended came for dental work. We had so many requests, that we had to go to a lottery system. Those tickets were gold. One of the lucky ones was Mark who allowed me to photograph his session with Dr. Brad. Mark is an incredible guy with a happy outlook on life even with all that it has thrown at him.
Mark got a filling on his front incisor.
Here is the before . . .
Dr. Brad got to work . . .
And the result!
Day 70 – Scars
I’ve been wanting to shoot my heart-related scars for a while but knew that it would take effective lighting to pull it off. Our next assignment for class is to shoot and print two photos (black and white) using a hot shoe flash both on and off camera. You are getting a sneak peek at what I ‘m pretty sure I’m going to use.
Day 62 – Now that the drugs have kicked in . . .
I had to visit my periodontist today for two gum grafts. Needless to say, I’m not on top of the world. But I’ve got drugs.
Taken before the fun began, I couldn’t help but notice this syringe looked like it had been around for a while. Hey, if it still does the job (and it did), why not keep it around as long as it’s useful? Hmm…I think I just said something profound (or it’s just the drugs talking).
Off to take a nap now.






































