The University of Florida quarterback and Heisman Trophy winner sure things Interesting , whether out of school. During spring break, Tebow added a new facet to his fame. In an impoverished village outside the city of General Santos in the Philippines, Tebow helped impoverished children circumcised. On Friday one-week trip to the orphanage run by his father ministry in Southeast Asia, Tebow assisted with the attention of villagers who had walked miles to the temporary clinic that helped organize the ministry. More than 250 people underwent medical and dental procedures, some of them “Dr Tebow,” which has no formal surgical training. “The first time was nerve-racking,” he said. “The hands were shaking a bit. I mean, I'm someone cutting. You can not do that sort of thing in the United States. But people really need surgery. Needed to help them.” Tebow not operating plan for that day in the Philippines - his job was to preach to the hundreds of people before it was pulled teeth or cysts removed. But as the day rolled on, he grew curious about the three doctors filipino and his friend, UF graduate and aspiring doctor Richard “RB” Molenaar, on the bus-sized vehicle that served as a mobile hospital. Tebow began as an assistant and GOF, holding tools and running errands for doctors. In the afternoon, was asking questions and seeking more active ways to help. And at the end of a tiring day, was the use of gloves and a mask, brandishing surgical scissors, finishing with a snip stitches. Patients were too young to ask Tebow their medical history. What the parents say if they knew about his other hand, pardon the pun? Medical care is free medical care free I suppose.
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