Thursday, May 29, 2008

Some Long Awaited Photos

Naomi took this picture, it's one of my favorites.That is the Rwandan flag, the other side of the lake is Congo.This was our house. (Just kidding)
A backboarding lesson.

Missionary Mail


The postal system in Kibogora is unreliable at best. So... Every time someone from the states comes out, they always end up transporting mail to and from Kibogora. The night before we left I was met by several folks who brought mail by in hopes that I could take back with me to mail from the states. I ended up with 74 pieces of mail! Five or six days from Rwanda to any of the 50 states sure beats 6-7 weeks!

Borrowed Students and the Macarena


I know... I've fallen down on the job of posting more Africa pictures. Actually, I've just been saving them up for you and building the suspense. ;)

A few days before we left Kibogora a group of students came from Roberts Wesleyan College in New York to help teach English at two local high schools. The night before we left they were invited to one of the schools for a special performance of some traditional dances. I finished teaching my last class a little early so I decided to go along with RWC group.

Long story short we found ourselves as the guests of honor sitting in front of a huge throng of Rwandan high schoolers watching the performance. It was actually quite the interesting experience. However, by the time the performance ended we found ourselves trapped in the building as there was a torrential downpour outside.

We were stuck there, sitting in front of 500 students who were all staring us expectantly. It was our turn. We were all asked to introduce ourselves. I decided it would be too complicated to try and tell them that I wasn't associated with the Roberts Wesleyan group and it didn't really matter anyway so I borrowed some students. After the introductions and several awkward moments of silence I finally figured out that they wanted us to perform.

I told them "Quick, do the Macarena or something." I didn't think they would actually do it!!!

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Update On Our New Friend


Meet Daniel, he is boy who was severely injured after being hit by a bus. I mentioned his story and showed you his x-rays a few entries ago. Here he is and he's doing great! He is off of oxygen and off of his IV. His lungs are sounding fairly decent and best of all he is walking which is SO important to his recovery. He still has a ways to go before he can return home, but he's certainly on the right track!

Out of Africa


Hello everyone, we've finally made it home! We left Kibogora at 8am on Thursday morning and arrived in Seattle at 2pm on Saturday afternoon. It was quite the long trip, especially when you include the 10 hour time difference between Rwanda and Washington.

Thank you to all of you who have been praying about our flights. We were able to fly to Kenya instead of Uganda. We ended up with our longest layover being only 7 hours in Niarobi. I found some good coffee and a great book so it really wasn't that bad at all.

However, true to our experiences, Naomi and I did seem to have some very different plane experiences. She always ends up sitting next to people who are photographers and such and always seems to have made new friends by the time we get off the plane. I however stuck sitting against a wall next to man reading "The World's Most Infamous Murderers." "So... Who's your favorite murderer?" ;)

On the 10 hour flight I was once again stuck with a "window seat" next to two men who slept nearly the entire time and seeminly never had to get up and use the bathroom!

Now that we are home I'm going to try posting more photos so don't tune out yet, the best is yet to come!

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Photograph with Caution!

I know that I promised everyone that I would take a lot of pictures… However, I’ve learned that one must exercise caution while he photographs. You must be prepared as the moment you take out your camera you will be surrounded (and perhaps stampeded) by men, women, and children who will want to be in your picture. It is therefore nearly impossible to obtain candid photos and if you don’t like being surrounded then forget it! We experienced this on market day as we walked down the crowded streets of a small village. The kids followed us for miles. Our only saving grace is that sometimes the parents say the “white ghosts” will eat the little children who misbehave. I’m sure you could have guessed that I was designated to be the “crazy scary cat lady” who chased them away; Naomi was our official photographer. She does better in large crowds and has a better camera. Unfortunately I do not have the software to download her beautiful photos so I won’t be able to post them until we get back.



Quick, While the Internet is Working...

The internet is momentarily back up!!! I thought I would try to write a "live" blog post while I still can. Our time at Kibogora is up, we leave tomorrow. Overall the classes have been a hit; so much so that we ended up teaching and extra 4 times through our entire curriculum! At first i was a little disappointed that we didn't have as much time to spend with each group to really get the information to soak in. However this morning I was excited to see some of the nurses teaching thier peers and even the doctors how to secure a patient on a backboard!
Several people have asked how they can pray specifically for Kibogora. Here are some of the most pressing needs we have seen here.
1) The Child Survival Program which provides food to malnutritianed children and education to their mothers is in danger of ceasing as the grant is finished. They are in the process of applying for a new grant.
2) Bushangi Hospital (about 45 minutes from Kibogora) was badly damaged in the Feb. earthquakes. None of the hospitals have been payed the money owed them by the government for the mutual. Bushangi is in danger of closing.
3) Kibogora Hospital is also owed money by the government. Until the money is paid they cannot buy the medicine their patients need.
4) The nursing school nearby has been closed. The government as asked Kibogora if they could be a site for a new university level nursing school. (Of course the funds would not come from the government) They are considering this and praying about funding.
5) The boy who was hit by the bus is recovering!!! Please pray for his continued recovery and that he will have the strength to continue on the diffiicult road to habilitation.
6) The hospital is in despirate need of oxygen concentrators.
7) Pray for continued strength for Julie and Sheila (she's back!) as they continue to work at Kibogora long term.

If I can add a selfish request...
Our flights home have changed, we now have to fly through Uganda, South Africa, and Amsterdam. The layovers between are 12 hours + which is never much fun, espicially with the current situation in South Africa. Pray that we will get home safely. Just maybe our flights will change again for the better! (We hope)
This may be the last entry until we return home, but then again it might not...

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Backboards in Africa!


In my preparation of the current Basic Trauma Training curriculum I learned that Kibogora Hospital did not have a backboard. For those of you who do not work in the medical field, a backboard is like a giant body splint. It is used to immobilize patients who may have very serious head, neck, and spinal injuries which could potentially result in paralysis or even death. At home a back board is considered a basic essential. How could I teach proper care of spinal injuries without a backboard? We could have one made!
I drafted some plans for a back board and measured out every detail, or at least I thought I had… Apparently it wasn’t obvious that the thing was supposed to be able to support the weight of an adult. The first attempt was made of paper thin balsa wood! I couldn’t help but laugh, I suppose it was my own fault for drafting the plans in only 2 dimensions. When we explained that the board was supposed to be used to move patients and therefore needed to be sturdy enough bare up to 90 kg. we all laughed.
The next version was proudly presented to us on Julie’s lawn. I made Naomi try it out this time while all the Zamoos (guards) picked her up. It worked well and for the most part it resembles a real backboard. It is the first backboard for all of the Southern Province! We have plans to “break it in” during Mondays classes.

Nakibazo

Hello all, sorry to have kept you waiting so long since the last post. We have had some internet and electricity problems for the past few days. The hospital is on generator right now until tonight at 9pm and then it's lights out! Seems like unstable electricity should be a huge problem when it comes to running a hospital but somehow they manage. The truly Rwandan response to anything unexpected seems to be "nakibazo" which means no problem. I guess it's kind of like "hakuna matatah" on Lion King?

Friday, May 16, 2008

A Few Photos

It's early Saturday morning here and I seem to have caught the internet at it's "fastest!" Here are a few photos I hope you will enjoy.



Thursday, May 15, 2008

More Trauma and Drama

Last night just before dinner Sheila came and told us that they were requesting a "muzungu consult" at the hospital for a trauma patient. Apparently it is a cultural thing that doctors will not listen to nurse's regarding clinical decisions so as you can immagine we were all very surprized by this.
Naomi and I went down to the hospital to find an 18 year old boy who had been hit by a bus. He had a very badly fractured left arm with multiple rib fractures on his left side accompanied by deminished lung sounds. I'm not an expert at reading x-rays but I think he also had a small pneumothorax. The physicians wanted to transfer to him to Butari for surgery consult. They were asking us if we thought this would be safe and advisable or if we should keep the patient at Kibogora.
He was too unstable to transfer in the "ambulance" with no oxygen for 3 hours, a potentially expanding pneumothorax, and unstable rib fractures on a "road" that is more like a dry river bed. So... Long story short we prayed hard and admitted him to the ICU. I wrote a "nursing care plan" (ICU orders in reality) and wrote a very thorough note in English. I checked on him again during the night and agian in the morning. He has been stable! I'm not sure how he will do long term as there are a million possible complications but I'm confident that the decision to keep in Kibogora was the right thing to do and the ICU nurse did a fantastic job of caring for him.

Monday, May 12, 2008

ER


While having dinner last night at Julie’s house, Sheila received a call from the head nurse at the hospital. Three emergent surgery cases had come in since afternoon and hospitals only surgeon is unexpectedly out of town. Two of the cases had been successfully transferred to Butari, the next closest hospital with surgery capabilities. The third case was a soldier with a suspected head injury. After her phone conversation Sheila asked if Naomi and I would go down to the hospital and “have a look at the soldier.” We arrived in the ER to find it full with only one poor nurse taking vital signs on the next bed.
We found our soldier unresponsive with a large palpable mass on his back. I suspect he may have been bleeding from a lacerated spleen and traumatic brain injury. He was too unstable to transfer to another hospital and there was no vehicle available to take him anyway. Sadly, there was nothing to be done and the man died 30 minutes later.
In the mean time, something on the next patient seemed to be alarming. When I looked behind the curtain I found an unconscious man lying face down in vomit gasping for breath and a malfunctioning oxygen concentrator.
Everyone helped to reposition the patient and we got the oxygen concentrator momentarily working again (it still required someone “rebooting” it every three minutes) but the patient had already aspirated. There was no suction available. His oxygen levels went from 47% to 88% and we decided to make a break for the ICU.
The whole night was an intense experience for everyone. I am beginning to understand how things work here and the everyday challenges that the staff face while caring for their patients. It is very different here…

Muzungu Moments Part 3


This afternoon I took my laptop down to the hospital to use the internet. In order to get a faster connection I encamped outside directly below the satellite dish. I was just about to finish posting the second edition of Muzungu Moments when out of the corner of my eye I spotted two little girls peaking around a corner at me. Once they knew I had seen them they giggled and waved, I waved back and said “Mediwe.” (Good afternoon in Kinyarwandan). They approached me slowly and cautiously with curious looks on their faces. After a few minutes they sat next to me on the ground watching as I typed. In the past I have been rightly accused of being “nerdy” and/or “teacherly” but I also know watching someone type isn’t one of the most riveting of activities.
Fortunately I had recently downloaded my camera’s memory card onto my hard drive. The girls smiled and giggled when I showed them pictures of snowy college campuses, water skiing, blin cakes, and some of the pictures of Kibogora that I had just taken. I also had some pictures of the fake injuries I had concocted before leaving the states. We skipped over those pictures quickly!
Soon the girls had figured out that they could move the arrow on the screen by using the touch pad. The biggest kick in the pants was when they learned to type their names; another Muzungu Moment.

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Muzungu Moments Part 2


We made it through our first full week of teaching! It's hard work teaching through a translator but I think we're starting to get the hang of it. After teaching the same class so many times it gets a little easier. The nurses seem to really be "getting into" the classes. The particularly seem to enjoy skills practice and the scenarios we give them as application exercises.
Julie and I went through some closets at the hospital and found a muzungo body! Ok, it was a mannequin, but as we carried it out of the closet and to the classroom in a sheet it certainly elicited some strange looks. So far our poor muzungu has suffered a car vs. pedestrian accident, a fall from a roof, a traumatic right foot and left hand amputation, an open abdominal wound, a host of other unfortunate ailments.
At first I was slighltly concerned that all of our teaching materials, photos, diagrams, and examples were caucasion and thus might be viewed as ethnocentric. However, during one of scenarios on shock and bleeding, one of the participants told me that the patient was very pale and therefore in a state of hypoperfusion! I love it, another muzungu moment!

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Muzungu Moments Part 1


The day started at 7 am with breakfast at Sheila’s. I think she’s still amused over our American accents. At 7:30 we went down to the hospital for morning prayers and got introduced to the hospital staff. After experiencing some technical difficulties with the French translations of our documents, we decided to wing it with our English versions. This morning’s class (Monday) was for the ER staff. We had to teach the class in the x-ray room as many of the staff who were in attendance were also on duty.
Our translator this morning was the anesthesiologist. After class he asked if would teach the material to his staff in the OR. By the end of the afternoon we were booked for three more classes than anticipated including two all day seminars. We are finding we have to make a few alterations in the material as we go but overall things have been going quite well.
After class I went down to the ICU for bit. I walked by a bed which appeared empty and noticed an IV dripping into the bed sheets. Upon further investigation I found a tiny 5 pound baby lying in the bed. The baby had quite the hernia for being such a tiny thing and was in need of surgery. Unfortunately the hospital’s only surgeon is out of town so the baby will have to be transferred to another hospital far away.
After lunch Naomi and I worked on our ever evolving curriculum to meet the demands of our unanticipated class load. When our brains could take it no longer we ventured down to the hospital just to see what was happening. Naomi is quite in to photography so we wondered about saying “photo?” Everyone we asked was delighted to have their pictures taken. They laughed and giggled to see themselves on the screen of the digital camera. Many of them have never seen themselves before as they do not have mirrors. Naomi soon found herself surrounded. I sneakily went to the balcony of another building and shot a photo of her “Muzungu moment.” In late afternoon we took a walk about the town. As I’m sure you could have guessed we once again surrounded by children curious of the muzungu.

Sunday, May 4, 2008

Kibogora


The internet here is pretty slow so I apologize for the rather short and incomplete posts. I’m trying the copy and paste method this time so we’ll see if this works any better. So far all is going very well. We are sharing our house with Kate, a British medical student, which has proven to be a lot of fun. The view from our little house is breath taking!
Friday morning Julie took Naomi and me into to town to an elders gathering. It’s actually like a mini Bible study for the poor elderly. They have a time of singing and dancing and short message. Afterward they serve everyone tea and bread and then send them home with a small bag of rice, beans, salt, and a bar of soap.
We toured the hospital and met most of the doctors and nurses we will be working with. We found out that there isn’t a backboard here. Julie and Sheila (our gracious hostesses) have suggested that we could help design one so they could have one made. Probably doesn’t sound very exciting to most people but it’s quite exciting to us! We will start teaching our classes tomorrow.
On a walk around town with Kate the idea that we are celebrities around her finally sunk in. We seemed to cause a bit of a stir and I think had there been more cars on the road we could have caused an accident! The children followed us smiling and giggling saying “muzungu, muzungu.” (Muzungu means ‘stranger’ but it’s used mostly around here for non African people.)
In a few minutes we’ll be heading out to church. I hear the choir is amazing! After church we’ll take a picnic lunch to Kumbya by the Lake Kivu and enjoy some time relaxing before we start our curriculathon to prepare for tomorrows class.

Saturday, May 3, 2008

The Monkey Incident



We made it safely to Kibogora on Thursday afternoon after a 6 hour drive through numerous small towns and a rain forest! Julie told us to keep an eye out for monkeys as we drove. Yes, we saw several monkeys and yes we have pictures to prove it! Naomi had the window rolled down to facilitate the prime photography opportunity. This little guy seemed to enjoy the attention as he modeled for us until he jumped up on the side mirror and nearly into Naomi's lap! We all laughed so hard we could barely breathe. As Sheila says "we were all creased." (She's British and apparently this means doubled over laughing.)