Volunteers
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Do you have a special skill? Would you like to help make Quechua Benefit better by donating some of your valuable time?
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The plane circles once and floats through the thin air onto the tarmac. Out come fifteen gringos from as far away as Jordan and as close as Atlanta, Georgia. The youngest member of the mission is thirteen years old, but of everyone on that tarmac, she has spent the most time in Peru.
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Rhonda Deschner is a pediatrician with a soft-spoken manner and a quick smile. Rhonda practiced medicine in Texas for twenty years before heading off to Peru on Quechua Benefit’s November Medical Mission.
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Marilyn Nishitani sizes up the little girl from Musoq Runa who settles shyly onto the exam table. At twelve years of age, an orphan for most of those years, the little girl has never spoken to a gringo woman, let alone been poked and prodded—albeit with gentle concern.
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At seventeen years, Sean could never have imagined himself as a doctor committed to practicing in an under-served community and making medical missions to foreign countries.
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Quechua Benefit is registered in the United States as a non-profit, charitable organization. All donations made by residents of the United States are tax deductible. Donors making donations from countries outside the United States must check with their government tax officials or website to determine if they can claim this
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