Dental van brings
smiles to both sides of the chair
By Danna Webster, KP News
A single driver starts up a mobile dental van in
predawn hours and steers it toward the Key Peninsula. By
the time the van doors open for business, at the Key
Peninsula Community Services, the driver has acquired a
full cargo of statelicensed dental staff. All aboard this
stateof the-art mobile dental clinic are volunteers except
the driver.
“I always expect some burly guy to drive that thing but
out comes little Yvette,” says Cristi Watson, executive
director of KPCS, which is the destination of the van.
Yvette Townsend is not only the driver, she is the
South Sound mobile dental unit coordinator for Northwest
Medical Teams International, Inc. (NWMTI) serving the area
from Seattle to Olympia. According to the dental staff,
Townsend makes the program happen, from gassing up in
Olympia to hooking up at the KP Community Center, and all
that goes between.
There is seldom any down time for Townsend and the
staff who may see as many as 15 patients per trip in the
two chairs aboard the van. Townsend says they begin with
patients needing urgent care and the first patient, this
Saturday morning, requires a root canal. That procedure
takes two and a half hours, throwing the entire schedule
off for the day.
The patient exits saying repeatedly to the staff,
“Thank you. God bless.”
There is no rush, according to Townsend, which is one
advantage of the dental van. They can take the time to
concentrate on the quality of their work. Their practice
is not dependent upon the number of patients they see. Her
favorite story is of one former patient who, upon
receiving an inheritance, declared she wanted to give it
to the dental van.
Townsend’s enthusiasm for the program is shared by the
professional staff, which includes hygienist Linda Cox,
dental assistant Luke Snyder and dentist Jill Hansen. This
is the first assignment for Dr. Hansen but Cox and Snyder
are regular volunteers. Snyder is a single parent who is
completing dental assistant training. He likes to
volunteer for the van because “it feels good to do things
for people.”
“It’s one way to make a contribution… This is my
calling,” Snyder says, adding that he experienced living
“on the other side of the tracks.”
The dental van is part of a nine-van fleet belonging to
NWMTI, an international disaster assistance program. The
program’s first assistance to the Pacific Northwest began
in 1989 with a mobile dental clinic to care for needy
families. Having the dental clinic van on the Key
Peninsula is thanks, in large part, to the efforts of
Jennifer Dean, assistant director of missions at Chapel
Hill Presbyterian Church in Gig Harbor.
At first, it was Dean’s plan to locate the dental van
at Chapel Hill but she says it “was not a good fit,” and
she began to make calls looking for people with needs that
were worthy of the church’s time and money. Dean found the
perfect fit when one of her calls connected to Watson. The
church was looking to provide dental care for low-income
families and the homeless and to partner with an agency
dedicated to meeting local needs. Watson made it obvious
to Dean that the Key Peninsula had a really big need, was
excited by the offer, and told her, “Let’s do it!”
Once Dean united the dynamo pair of Cristi Watson and
Yvette Townsend, access to basic dental care for needy
families on the Peninsula became available. The volunteers
providing the care are dedicated to their motto to “change
a life for good.” When Cox, the hygienist, was asked about
coming to the Key Peninsula, she said, “It’s very
worthwhile, we see everything out here.” She was quick to
add, “We couldn’t do this without Cristi and Yvette.”
The dental van program is looking for licensed dental
volunteers and financial donations. “Just $60 provides
complete care for one child,” says Dean, and recommends
the Website at
www.nwmti.org. The contact is Jennifer Dean, Chapel
Hill Church, 853-0238, or
jdean@chapelhillpc.org.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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