About Missions

Gift of Life MissionsAn essential aspect of the Gift of Life network is the mission. Missions are conducted on a regular basis. The three types of missions are: diagnostic screening, surgical, and medical/training. All of these missions are funded by individual Gift of Life programs, which are aligned with Rotary Clubs and Districts around the world. Rotarians in developing countries will help to identify the facilities where the missions will be conducted. In some instances, Gift of Life provides the necessary equipment and supplies to the healthcare facility so that the mission may be conducted.

The Diagnostic Screening Mission:

Screening missions identify children with congenital heart defects in developing countries. Customarily, a diagnostic screening mission will consist of a pediatric cardiologist, an echo technician and a Rotarian affiliated with a Gift of Life program. They usually last between five and seven days and screen an estimated 100 children. The children that are brought in for screening have already been diagnosed with some form of heart defect. The children from these missions will ultimately become candidates for treatment.

The Surgical Mission:

Surgical missions require that a team of surgeons, cardiologists, nurses and other healthcare professionals travel to a country where children do not have access to the medical procedures necessary to save their lives. These missions allow Gift of Life to reach more and more children each year, and without the intervention of Gift of Life, these children would likely succumb to their medical conditions. The surgical mission's sole goal is to perform surgery on children.

The Medical/Training Mission:

Medical/Training missions have become more prevalent over the past couple of years. With Gift of Life's focus on establishing sustainable pediatric cardiac surgery programs in developing countries, these missions have become the center point of that effort. Medical/Training missions are similar in nature to the surgical mission. Where they differ is that they take place at hospitals in developing countries that have the potential to house a pediatric cardiac surgery program of their own. These facilities must have the capability to support such a program, including operating rooms, intensive care units, and physicians and nurses who can be trained. The Medical Teams that conduct these missions focus on two goals: saving the lives of children and training the healthcare professionals at the hospital. The training of these healthcare professionals can last for a period of 3 to 5 years, with the ultimate goal of establishing the institutions so that they may sustain their own programs.

2012 Gift Of Life Medical Missions

2011 Gift Of Life Medical Missions

2010 Gift Of Life Medical Missions

2008-09 Gift Of Life Medical Missions

Mission Work

GOLI has participated in many missions recently. Here are several video clips that tell the stories of the lives we've helped save.

In September of 2009, Gift of Life International affiliate Gift of Life Los Angeles co-sponsored a medical mission to San Salvador, El Salvador along with Sana Mi Corazon and Heart Care International. 48 El Salvadorian children received their life-saving surgeries during this mission. The following video is a news account of this mission (please note that it is in Spanish)

Click here to view Telemundo in El Salvador video on GOL

Diary of Honduras Trip 1/11/10

Long Islanders Saving Lives in Honduras

The Children of our 2010 Medical Mission to Mater Hospital, Nairobi, Kenya