Country Zest & Style Winter 2021 Edition

Page 32

For Jackson, It’s Teach and Treat

F

By Leonard Shapiro

or Richard Jackson, it began with Peace Corps service more than four decades ago and his 1977 posting to Kenya. He had finished his training as a physical therapist at the Ithaca College/Albert Einstein School of Medicine and soon was sharing his expertise by teaching at the Kenya Medical Training College. “The Peace Corps was probably where the idea of helping people came from,” said Jackson, a longtime Middleburg resident who started his practice here and now, with his wife Anna, has grown it to 21 clinics located in Northern Virginia and Maryland. “Anna and I are both believers that it’s important in life to help other people and improve the world around you,” Jackson said in a recent interview. The Jacksons have funded The Jackson Clinics Foundation, a non-profit that over the last ten years has educated and trained physical therapy students in Kenya, Ethiopia and most recently Mozambique. The foundation’s motto: “Teach One, Treat Many.” Over the years, Jackson has taught over 400 classes, many of them in Africa. The foundation, including many volunteers now employed by the Jackson Clinics, has helped train hundreds of physical therapist in countries where, in sone cases, there were none. “We started in 2010 in Ethiopia,” Jackson said.”Over a seven-year period, we launched the

first doctoral program in physical therapy on the African continent. Our doctors of physical therapy are unique in the world. They set fractures, suture wounds, give injections, write prescriptions and order and read X-rays. Most doctors of physical therapy in other places don’t do that, but there really was a need in Ethiopia.” In 2012, Jackson started a graduate program in orthopedic manual therapy in Kenya and turned it over to the government last year after graduating 180 students. In 2019, he launched the first women’s health program in East Africa, in Nairobi. COVID has temporarily put a hold on the program, but it will resume when the pandemic has eased. “Women’s health in Africa, especially pelvic health problems, are really under-served there,” Jackson said. “Physical therapy can do a tremendous amount of good for women, and that was pretty much unknown when we first started the program." In Juy, 2019, Jackson was asked to start physical therapy training in Mozambique. “They have none,” he said. “That is just an astonishing statement. We’re talking about helping treat strokes, amputees, everything. Before, they basically were sent home to die.” At the invitation of the Mozambique government, the foundation has begun a four-year bachelor of science program in physical therapy. They launched it with about 40 students, with many more to come. The Jacksons mostly fund the foundation, with

many employees and other college instructors volunteering to help teach and offer practical clinical advice for two weeks at a time. The foundation pays their expenses and welcomes outside grants or donations and help from foreign governments. Because of the pandemic, many students have been forced to drop out of programs because they could not afford the modest tuition that is used to pay for volunteer teachers accommodations. Over the last two months, $30,000 has been raised, much of it contributed by some of their U.S. instructors who, because of the pandemic, are also teaching virtually. Jackson is a native of upstate New York in a town called Mexico not far from Syracuse. He likes to tell people Mexico is only five mies away from Texas, N.Y., and Phoenix, N.Y. is not that far either. Ethiopia, Kenya and Mozambique, of course, are halfway around the world, and Jackson is obviously proud of the work he and his colleagues have done to train hundreds in programs that will continue to grow. “As physical therapists, we spend all day helping people,” he said. “When you have the means to help, that’s what you do. I’ve always felt I could reach more patients by teaching. I know I’m reaching thousands of people because of what we’re doing. To me, that’s what this is all about.” To donate toward student tuition, go to www.teachandtreat.org

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Matt Hannan: A Perfect Fit at Long Branch

3min
page 45

Doing It All at Middleburg Tennis Club

2min
page 44

At Shiloh Baptist, From Military to Ministry

3min
page 43

Oatlands Diary Details Once Lost Descendants

3min
page 42

Semper Fi: The Montford Point Marines

4min
pages 40-41

I Hereby Do Resolve To...

2min
page 37

At Station No.. 3, They're Always Fired Up

3min
pages 34-35

For Jackson, It’s Teach and Treat

3min
pages 32-33

Latitudes: Weaving a Way to Empower Women Worldwide

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pages 30-31

Pablo & Dilly Are At Home On The Farm

1min
pages 28-29

Candlemaker’s Quest Leads to Start-Up Home Business

2min
page 26

The Cold War Comes Alive at Vint Hill Museum

2min
page 25

England Blooms in Paris

2min
page 24

Country Zest & Style Winter 2021 Edition

3min
page 22

Picture Perfect

3min
page 20

Country Zest & Style Winter 2021 Edition

1min
page 18

He’ll Take Paris, The Historic Virginia Village

6min
pages 16-17

Perspectives on Childhood, Education and Parenting Wait: The Art and Science of Delay by Frank Partnoy

2min
page 15

At Teddy’s, It’s All About the Dough

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page 14

Frank Drew: A Samaritan’s Life Spectacularly Lived

4min
page 13

Diamonds Were These Girls' Best Friend

1min
page 12

Fauquier Habitat Building For the Future

2min
page 11

At Nick’s Deli, It’s Time to Celebrate

1min
page 10

PSO Still Spreading the Sweet Sound of Music

3min
pages 8-9

Remembering a Long Ago Middleburg Officer Down

2min
page 7

A Community Center For One and All

2min
page 6

ON THE COVER

2min
page 4
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