Patients

Amid Adversity, A Family’s Bravery Emerges

March 10, 2022

Alex, before surgery.

Holding their newborn baby for the first time is often one of the most joyous moments a parent can experience. But for Ani and her husband, Roberto, seeing their son, Alex, brought feelings of fear and despair.

Alex was born with a cleft condition. 

Worldwide, it’s estimated that every three minutes, a child is born with a cleft condition. Many of those parents experience similar emotions of uncertainty and worry that Roberto and Ani felt.

Lacking awareness of the potential causes of cleft conditions – which can be environmental, hereditary or a combination of both factors – families oftentimes blame themselves. After seeing their child’s cleft lip, many mothers and fathers begin to question what they did wrong. Some even believe that they are receiving punishment by having a child with a cleft condition. 

In higher-income countries, families have immediate access to health care professionals with the skills and expertise to treat cleft conditions. With health systems in place to provide hope during a time when they feel alone, parents are comforted when they receive resources, support and surgical intervention early in their child’s life. 

But depending on where families live around the world, what happens next in their child’s cleft care journey can look very different. 

In areas of the world with under-resourced health care systems and a lack of trained medical professionals, access to timely surgery and cleft care is often unavailable or inaccessible. 

Fortunately, the doctors at the hospital where Alex was born calmed Ani’s fears by explaining how her son’s cleft condition could not only be repaired through surgery, but that Operation Smile Paraguay would provide the high-quality cleft care he needed at no cost to the family. 

When Ani called the number of the Operation Smile Paraguay office, she received immediate support to help her gain confidence when navigating the challenges of caring for a child with a cleft condition. 

A few weeks later, when Alex was 1 month old, Ani made the 4 1/2-hour journey from their home to the care center in Asunción. There, Alex was evaluated by a volunteer pediatrician, and Ani received more counseling on breastfeeding a baby with a cleft condition. Fortunately, Alex was thriving because he was able to breastfeed properly. 

The Operation Smile Paraguay local team reassured Ani and Roberto that Alex was healthy and that they just needed to be patient until the next surgical program. 

Seven months later, that day finally arrived. However, an unforeseen obstacle arose.

Ani, Roberto and 8-month-old Alex made the journey back to Asunción in hopes that he would receive life-changing cleft surgery. But with so many children living with untreated cleft conditions in the country, there weren’t enough resources or time for the local team to provide surgery to every patient who arrived. 

Alex would have to wait until the next scheduled program to receive surgery. 

But Ani and Roberto never lost hope, and they became more determined than ever to get their son the care he deserved. 

After six months of waiting for the next surgical program, Ani and Roberto prepared to make another journey to Asunción. 

Rather than experiencing the same disappointment they felt during their last attempt at surgery, Roberto and Ani were filled with anticipation. 

Their hopes were realized when Alex was selected for surgery to receive his new smile. 

Ani couldn’t find the words to express her emotions of seeing Alex for the first time. When asked if she had a message for the volunteers who helped her son, she said, “Thank you.”

After the family returned home, friends, family and neighbors who knew Alex were amazed by the change and gathered to see the his new smile.

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