Page 4 September 18, 2019 Angola Medical Clinic has Portland Roots c ontinued froM f ront had previously been a supervisor of veterinary services at a veterinary hospital. But before he went, Estevao Capuia visited his son and daugh- ter-in-law in Washington D.C., where Moreland-Capuia was working toward her medical degree at George Washington University School of Medicine at the time. The three sat at a kitchen table and agreed that the most pressing needs in Angola were the development of agriculture, education and health care, but couldn’t agree on which should come first. His daughter-in- law, not surprisingly, said a health clinic should come first, but no consensus was reached. The elder Capuia then visited Angola for a month, but while he was there he had an accident that resulted in an open fracture of his finger. He went to a government hospital, just to learn that they had no supplies or antibiotics, which af- ter a 10-hour search, he was finally able to secure. That was enough to change his mind. “When he got back to DC, he had an emergency procedure,” Moreland-Capuia said. “Then he sat at the same table and said, ‘Re- member our conversation? I think you’re right about a clinic.’ ” The clinic is a reality now, but it wasn’t easy to get off the ground because the Capuia family didn’t want to risk outside influence or the possibility of corruption, even ruling out help from the Interna- tional Monetary Fund and the Eu- ropean Union. “So 18 of us formed a founda- tion,” said Moreland-Capuia. “We didn’t want NGOs (non-govern- photo by b everly c orbell /t he p ortland o bserver Daniel Capuia (second from left) and his wife Dr. Alisah Moreland-Capuia (center), founders of the Portland-based Capuia Foundation, gather with the three future doctors who joined them in Africa this summer where they got valuable experience at a nonprofit medical clinic started by the Capuia family. Monique Hedmann (far left) and Shane Hervey and Kelley Butler (right) are the medical students pictured. photo courtesy of the c apuia f oundation The exterior of the newly-built healthcare clinic in Angola founded by Portland physician Dr. Alisha Moreland-Capuia and her family-based Capuia Foundation. This past summer, Dr. Moreland-Capuia brought three medical students from Oregon and California to the African country to spend a week at the clinic treating patients as part of their training as future doctors. Funerals ~ Memorial Services ~ Cremation ~ Preplanning “Dedicated to providing excellent service and superior care of your loved one” Funeral Home staff available 24 hours 503-249-1788 Terry Family Funeral Home 2337 N Williams Ave, Portland, Or 97227 www.terryfamilyfuneralhome.com mental organizations) or the gov- ernment involved. We wanted it to be a family affair.” Moreland-Capuia said that 99 percent of funding goes straight to the clinic, which employs one physician, Dr. Andre Miranda, two nurses, one medical technician and one midwife. “The clinic was literally built one window at a time, one door at a time, and everyone with the last name Capuia made a contribu- tion, whatever they could,” More- land-Capuia said. It wasn’t just a matter of putting up a building, though. “We definitely built this with the community; we didn’t just impose it,” she said. “We had to do infra- structure — water and lights — and all the employees are Angolan, to help build the local economy. We’re proud of the model.” Moreland-Capuia is also proud of the three students. Both Butler and Hedmann have master’s de- grees in public health, and Her- vey is thinking about going into pediatrics. But moreover, they are now ambassadors for the clinic in Angola. “The inaugural group,” she said. “They can open up to others and we will set up rotation (for fu- ture med school students) through OHSU.” The Capuias also describe some of their motivations behind the clinic on a video on the clinic’s website, where Daniel Capuia talks about the turmoil in the country be- fore his family left. “It was chaos — there were bombings everywhere,” he said. “The Cubans were there and the Soviet Union was there and there was no way to stay. We had to flee.” Daniel Capuia knows the path ahead will not be easy. “Sometimes you have to look back to see where you come from. If you want to make a change, make a difference, that’s the route you have to take,” he said in the video. When the clinic first opened, about 40 percent of patients could not afford an exam, he said. “It’s now up to 90 percent,” he said. “My father was adamant — they will never be turned away if they can’t afford it.” The clinic is the only full-ser- vice clinic in an area with a pop- ulation of 550,000, he said, a stag- gering statistic. “It’s a lot of work, a lot of time and effort,” he said. “But it’s ‘heart work’ because we can see lives being changed and being affected.” Creating the clinic has even wider implications for Angola, Moreland-Capuia said in the video, and the government has recognized that this model for health care is one the entire country can benefit from. “We are the catalyst for a large transformative movement that we believe is happening in Angola,” she said. To learn more about the Good Samaritan Health Care Clinic and the Capuia Foundation and to do- nate to the effort, visit the website TheCapuiaFoundation.org.