Elementary school students in Choibalsan, Mongolia wait to get dental work done.
Dr. Larsen works on one of the 400 students he personally attended to during the humanitarian mission.
Dr. Larsen poses with some of the many grateful students he was able to work on during his trip to Mongolia.
“I checked 180 kids at one school, and 90 of them had at least one visible carious involvement. Some had up to ten. They have no x-rays there, even in their clinics, so we were going by what we could see. Many of them had six or seven teeth already decayed right off the gum line,” he said.
Dr. Larsen works on a young elementary student girl in Choibalsan, Mongolia.
Because he’s now retired, Dr. Larsen says he hopes to try and send his x-ray machine to Choibalsan. He worries that the clinics might become overwhelmed at the number of caries revealed by the x-rays, but says, “at least it will help them with the more difficult extractions they have to do.”
Dr. Larsen loved working with the people and children of Mongolia. He gets emotional when he recounts how they danced and sang and gave him gifts when he left, despite how little they have. “I loved those people. They showed us so much love.”
Dr. Larsen and several elementary school students and teachers smile for the camera after he provided free dental work to their school during his trip.
He might be retired, but Dr. Larsen’s passion for humanitarian dentistry won’t let him stop anytime soon. He’s planning a trip to Uganda for six weeks in January and February; to Taroa, which is located in the Marshall Islands, in March; and another trip back to Mongolia as soon as he can, as the mayor of Choibalsan has extended an open invitation for him to return whenever possible.
Ultradent is incredibly proud and honored to support humanitarian work done around the world by doctors like Dr. Clyde and Dr. Orchard. Thank you for your efforts in making a difference.
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