60 MINUTES Ventures Out with Volunteers on 'Africa Mercy' Hospital Ship, 2/17
By: Tyler Peterson Feb. 14, 2013
Few have changed the lives of people the way the volunteers on the Africa Mercy have. Serving aboard the world's largest civilian hospital ship, they have restored sight to thousands of people suffering from cataracts and returned smiles to victims of facial tumors and cleft palates whose deformities made them social outcasts. Scott Pelley goes to Togo on Africa's West Coast to report on the Africa Mercy's patients and the dedicated doctors and nurses who have made the ship and its mission a way of life. Pelley's report will be broadcast on 60 Minutes Sunday, Feb. 17 (7:00-8:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network.
The Africa Mercy spent five months docked in Togo, where its staff removed 281 tumors, repaired 34 cleft palates and restored sight to 794 cataract patients who had been blind, some for decades. Maxillofacial surgeon Dr. Gary Parker left his native California -and UCLA, where he trained - and volunteered for what he thought might be a temporary assignment removing facial tumors and performing other procedures on Third World patients. That was 26 years ago. He has since married his wife, whom he met onboard, and raised two children on the ship, all along transforming the lives of people, some of whom could literally not show their faces in the light of day.
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