paolo dr. roberto kikawa came up with the idea for mobile medical clinics--basically, adaptable trucks that go wherever they are needed, providing diagnosis and treatment for people who might otherwise go without care. >> roberto kikawa's working day starts with a prayer. he compares his profession to religious service. he is a doctor. and brazil is a religious country. dr. kikawa doesn't have a posh doctor's office in san paolo, but travels to where he is needed most with his mobile medical center, as part of the cies project. at the moment, he and his colleagues are in san matteus, a poor district on the outskirts of the city treating locals in a mobile clinic. this morning kikawa will perform forty gastroscopies, making sure in each case to take plenty of time to get to know the person behind the patient. that approach is central to his project. >> they have feelings and a soul, body and spirit and those things all go together. that is what doctors are there for, to take everything into consideration - not just the illness. if you do that, you are contributing to change, to transformation!"