| When Disaster Strikes As Senior Development Officer for Northwest Medical Teams, Alum Helps Deliver Care
to Those Who
Need It Most            
                           WHEN EVENING NEWS ANCHORS report world disasters such as flooding
                in Mozambique, earthquakes in Turkey or civil unrest in Albania,
there’s a good chance that Northwest Medical
Teams volunteers are already on site, thanks in part to the work of Dick Frederick ’63.
             
             
 
              
 
                |  |  |  
 
                | From pouring
concrete floors in Mexico to treating burn victims in Moldova, volunteer teams
dispatched by Dick Frederick ’63 serve some of the most impoverished regions of the world. |  |   The organization, which sends medical supplies and response teams
              comprised of nurses, physicians and other aid workers to countries
              worldwide, recently caught the eye of Forbes magazine. In the December
              8, 2003, issue, Forbes identified Northwest Medical Teams as one
            of the nation’s top 10 charities for investors.  “Your
              credibility instantly climbs when an organization like Forbes recognizes
              you,” says Frederick, Northwest Medical Teams’ senior
              development officer. “This will definitely help us in our
              mission to demonstrate the love of Christ to people who are impacted
            by disaster and poverty. ”But when the emergency response
              organization
              was established in Portland, Oregon, in 1979 by founder Ron Post,
              there wasn’t any fanfare — just a vision to reach the
              world’s most needy. Frederick loves to tell the story. “Ron
              saw an image on television of a young Cambodian girl’s body
              in a rice paddy being picked up by an aid worker,” he says. “He
              looked over at his own healthy daughter and vowed to do something
            to help the world’s suffering.”  That is a vision Frederick
              says he can’t get out of his head. “One man — rather
              than flipping
              the channel, or grabbing a snack from the fridge — decided
              to make a difference,” says the former ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ
              alumni director, who left his post at his alma mater in 1996 to
              head the Northwest Medical Teams’ first Puget-Sound-area
            office.  Frederick says that leaving Seattle Pacific wasn’t
              an easy choice, but the call on his heart was real and pressing.
              Even more, it was Frederick’s
              personal way, he explains, of engaging the culture and changing
            the world.  Since its beginning, the organization has deployed more
              than 1,100 volunteer teams, and through a unique partnership with
              the Boeing Company, it has helped ship some $525 million in medical
              supplies around the world. But not all teams are made up of doctors
              and nurses — many are staffed by people of different occupations.
              One such group recently journeyed to Oaxaca, Mexico, to lay concrete
              floors in homes where children previously
            played on dirt.  Frederick notes that Northwest Medical Teams reaches
              people close to home, too. “Thanks to donated dental supplies
              and volunteer
              dentists and dental hygienists, the Mobile Dental Clinic program
              has served more than 12,000 patients in the Northwest who were
            without dental care,” he says.  What is the message Frederick
              wants to send to the SPU community? Simply stated: There is no
              limit to what one person can accomplish. “I will never stop
              being impressed by the impact people can have by giving of their
              time,” he says.
 — BY SARAH JIO
 — PHOTO BY JOHN KEATLEY
 
  Back to the topBack to Campus
 |  |  
  
  
 From the President
 As today’s opinion-shapers declare the Christian message irrelevant, ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ President Philip Eaton reminds us: “For two billion people, the resurrection of Jesus Christ changed everything.”
  “This Is Our Campaign”Creativity and commitment are the hallmarks of faculty contributions, including finding precision science equipment and seeking grants. [Campaign]
  Acting on AIDSA student-led campaign encouraging a Christian response to a world pandemic had the campus seeing orange. [Campus]
  Fact or Fiction?A new Response department reviews the best-seller The
  Da Vinci Code. Why is
    this page-turner disturbing so many Christians? [Books & Film]
   Looking Ahead Falcon women keep their sights on a national championship after a perfect season
  ends too soon at the Elite Eight. [Athletics]
 
 My Response
 Nicaraguan native Maria Antonia Caldera Hunter ’89 tells of an SPU study tour to her homeland that showed her the presence of Christ in unlikely places.
 |  |