Friday, September 30, 2011

An hour in the Africa Mercy Operating Rooms

Got to go down to our OR's for a few hours this week, and WOW. Are all OR's as cool as this? (Or theater as my British friends call it). In the space of two hours I got to see pieces of 6 different surgeries in progress in 4 OR rooms.

In the first room, Dr. Tertius Venter from South Africa was putting back together a man's toes that looked like he'd stepped on a landmine - a "T-bomb" as the OR staff joked - he had localized macrodactyly - i.e., his toes were enormous. They hadn't stopped growing so Dr. Tertius was debulking them, taking out extra tissue, fat, muscle, and fashioning new toes for the chap that fit in shoes. Plump weird and way cool. Not a huge fan of the little basin of extra toe pieces though. Gag.

The second about broke everybody's heart around and what a priveledge to see her surgery. Sweet little eleven year old girl who was flown in from Nigeria to have her surgery. I had seen her quite by accident before her surgery. I'd gotten up late one morning, went for a cup of tea on the 5th deck cafeteria, looked down and choked on my tea. This little girl, calmly waiting in the admissions tent had a bone tumor the size of a melon right below her eyes. A massive bone tumor. Solid as a rock made of enamel and calcium. You couldn't discern a face because all there was is a huge tumor. I wish I could show you picture, but i'm sure that the Mercy Ships will be writing an article on their website about her in the near future, so keep your eyes out. When I walked into that OR, Dr. Parker had been at it for about 3 hours already. The tumor was sitting on a side table with a couple of teeth sticking out of it, and the little girl didn't have a face at that point, just a bit hole.

It's a fascinating surgery and what a miracle that we have this awesome team who can do this surgery. It involves taking out the tumor, opening up a flap on the side of the head, bringing down the temporalis muscle to swing down and create into a barrier between her nasal and bucal cavities, then sewing that flap back after placing some drains, and then creating a face out of the hole that is left after the tumor is out. All I could identify was the child's tongue. And guess what, apparently she's doing just fine two days after surgery. I can't wait to see what she looks like.

The other four surgeries were cataract removals. Super way cool 'cause one minute they can't see and the next they can. They're awake for the surgery, with local anesthetics deadening the eye and (I hope) something to chill the patient out. I got to watch the eye surgeons slit into the base of the squishy clear stuff, scrape out the cataract, replace it with a lense and then suture it back shut. And the blind shall see.
One dude needed a bit more anesthetic as he flinched... they were asking him, "Are you feeling pain, do you hurt?" and he wasn't answering.... I busted out my sucky Krio on him, being a nurse, I do know how to ask a patient if he's in pain. The surgeon looked up at me wide-eyed and said, "Welcome to the Eye Team". heehee. yeah right.

Lionel just became way even cooler in my eyes.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Seventy two hours of prayer

I am unbelievably blessed and so completely not worthy to be working alongside such fabulous nurses as they have onboard the Africa Mercy. I will maintain it as long as I live. Caring, like, for real. Hearts full of compassion and brilliant ideas for their patients, such as the latest scheme some great soul has cooked up. As the nurses we're doing a 72 hours of prayer for our hospital, the ship, our patients, time of personal reflection, confession of sin, dedicating our steps to the Lord, using the time for worship and communion with the Lord. We're praying for the physical recovery of our patients and so much more importantly for their souls, that they may come to see and know the Lord while onboard. That those who know Him may know and see that He has not forgotten them.

E Ward has been redecorated by creative minds to be comfy and cozy. There are dimly lit lamps around the room, pillows on mats on the floor, somebody found a carpet! There are corners for creative expression and words the Lord gives us during this time. Journals to write reflections in. A map for us to pin requests on in the world. A cross for us to confess sins at. We are signing up for hour prayer slots, yes, even though the wee hours of the morning and I am so proud of everybody 'cause there are only three or four slots left open. I must admit that my rather skeptical self took a look at this loooong signup list and I did really doubt the nurses alone would fill it, but there they go... with help of a few ancillary staff as well.

I was talking with one of my roommates and she was telling me about how her colleague had visited the mother/baby hospital in town and was horrified by some of the stuff, mainly the sterilization room (chlorine in buckets for O.R. utensils, washing and reusing gauze (!!!!!) and that intubation equipment doesn't get even washed between cases... yeah, here's some TB for you, for you and for you). She was mentioning just a real need to pray for all of this stuff and start doing something about it, where I took her hand and marched her up to our prayer signup sheet... I love it when I see people's eyes light up about something cool like that.. isn't that just the way the Lord works?

So I'm just praying as the Lord pours his mercy out on the people of Sierra Leone through us, that He would have mercy on us too while He's at it... healing those wounds, healing hearts, mending broken lives, restoring individuals to their families and communities.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

malaria, disappointment and Uncle Peter

It's the rainy season and malaria is spreading rather rifely throughout the population of Freetown and my guess would be the rest of Sierra Leone right now. People are going down with it rather all over. Yesterday's surgery admission's sheet was a grim reflection on the matter. Surgery cancellations were marked in orange, and of the list of 15 people or so, every other person on the list was in orange, had malaria and had to be sent home without their operation. My heart just goes out to them, to look forward to having your operation and to be sent home must just be a cruel blow. Their disappointment so keen. As it is i'm covered in mosquito bites and here Randy Nabors told me to watch it at dusk and that was my own fault. Yes, I'm taking the doxycycline so I won't (hopefully) take a hit of the bad mojo. (sorry mom!)

It happens a lot with our pregnant patients as well. Standard protocol is to check for pregnancy in women of a certain age and you just don't do it if they're pregnant. They get sent home in keen disappointment - and then the admissions team goes all aghast when they show up the next day, "I'm not pregnant anymore."  This has happened quite a few times already that I know of... and it's just through the grapevine. Heartbreak.

And yet as nurses we have all remarked at one huge difference between nursing here and nursing at home. No matter how bad the news we have to deliver is, the patients here never take out their frustrations and anger on the staff. At home you just brace yourself because you're about to have your very existance belittled if you so much as inform a patient that their surgery has been delayed a few hours. It's not a grim resignation here, although I'm sure there is a measure of that, they just channel it differently. They do cry, they might even yell, but it's not at you. Very interesting and it's been part of why so many of us nurses have enjoyed nursing here... you're allowed to just take care of people and have them appreciate it! Imagine that.

Thank you to everybody who enquired about my grandfather in the last few days. My mom called me this morning to tell me that Uncle Peter has gone to be with the Lord this morning. Please pray for my grandmother today. What a bittersweet joy to know he is in that promised place, he's no longer in pain, he's no longer suffering, no longer fighting for breath, but in the sweet presence of Jesus. I'm crying but so relieved it's over.

Oh, we call him Uncle Peter because although he's really the only grandfather we've ever known, our blood grandfather passed away in 1989. Uncle Peter has been in our family's lives since my mom was a little girl, and Granny and he were married around 15 years ago.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Toilets on the wards

So toilets are sometimes a new concept for a culture long used to holes in the floor. All new patients get a "this-is-a-toilet" lecture when they arrive on the ward, with a demonstration on how to flush, to use toilet paper (and not the showerhead please). And don't wee in the shower either. It doesn't always sink in, but the artwork on the bathroom walls helps. :-)



A moment on night shift

It's 2:30 am, GMT and A ward has finally settled into a bit of a quiet lull, with an occasional cough or baby's cry disrupting the peace. There are 20 beds in this room, however many of the patients are children, so their parent or caregiver sleeps on a mattress literally under the bed. Sometimes mom has another baby, or mom is the patient, so there are two people under each bed. There are a lot of warm bodies packed into this hot room right now!

Some nights it gets complicated when mom decides to sleep on the bed and your patient gets relegated to the mattress below, baby brother is in your way too, it's 3 am and you can't reach your patient to check vitals- 'cause he's buried too deeply in the little cave under the bed. :-) That's when imagination and perseverance kick in - clambering over their bags, pulling at the mattresses with all your might at an angle through the bed's legs, trying valiantly not to land on your own rump, giggling at the situation and wondering how you're ever going to describe this one to people at home. And how that would so not work at home - could you imagine the look on people's faces? "Sir, here's your bed, ma'am, you go right under the bed."


We've switched from general surgery to plastic surgery now, for the simple reasons that those are the surgeons we now have onboard. No, we're not doing boob jobs and facelifts! I would encourage people to check the Mercy Ships website, http://www.mercyships.org/ for pics of what we get up to- crazy facial tumors, burn contracture releases, etc., that we're up to now. I'm learning so much and feel quite a fish out of water, mainly because I have no clue about plastics. Cardiothoracics, all the way. (Go CTSU!)

For example, I have two patients who have seizure disorders and have fallen into fires, whose limbs have shrivelled up and are now useless. So, what our surgeons are doing is releasing the taut skin, the scarring,  stretching out limbs, covering wounds with grafts of their own skin shaved from a healthy spot on a leg usually. So these patients have a graft site and a donor site, sometimes a few sites if the burn was not contained to just one part of the body. It's all very painful as  you can imagine and prone to infection, so we nurses are being a bit overly neurotic about infection control right now. The difference between a clean wound and an infected one can mean a hundred days onboard as you wait for it to slowly heal- with daily painful dressing changes - and we're only here for another 3 months then the ship sails away. Well, there's your motive for prayer for these next few months! That wounds will heal!!

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

A surefire way to make my heart explode

So this is a shameless plug for my beautiful niece. I have the two sweetest sisters in the world, is all I can say. They sent me this video a few weeks ago, and i'm sharing it with you all 'cause Elie's so stinkin' cute!

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

some random pics

All the way. Africa Mercy 2011 Crew shirt. With phonetic Krio writing.

Arabic Sprite?!



Monday, September 12, 2011

Babies!


   Is this little one not irrepressably cute? She was found three days after birth, give or take a day, by the above lady - she'd been dumped in a latrine. She was covered in maggots and we're reparing a hold in her little nose where an infection had set in.  Finders keepers! This lady is in the process of adopting her.
Pics to go with the stories!
Baby Kadiatu - here to have a lump removed off her neck. Sweet thing.




The joys of being on night shift this week - lots of photos!

They've stolen my heart





Ali, melter of hearts.

on freckles

So, the african children are not used to freckles.

One friend got asked if he was sick.

Another got asked if she was turning black like them.

:-)

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

our littlest babies

   Yesterday we admitted the sweetest handful of little babies. They promptly stole all our hearts and ooh, I could... well, did, just squinch them. Oh, these little ones. Two of these babies have congenital cataracts, on both eyes, and are getting operated on in about an hour, so please do pray for them now and as they recover. I mean, right now! Drop what you're doing and pray for them please. I can't tell you what fun (and heartrendering) it was to watch these two toddle around and keep them from running into things... and sometimes they did if we didn't catch them fast enough. Toddle, toddle, toddle, bump! Into chairs or beds, just pull your heart right from your chest. Praise God that we have a pediatric opthalmologist onboard for a week! One of the babies has malaria so please pray.

   Another little 6 month old has little webbed hands and feet. We shot some X-rays and can see that he has all the bones necessary for fingers and toes, so he will also get operated on by our plastic surgeon extraordinaire, Dr. Gary Parker, who has been onboard Mercy Ships for 20 something years! Raising his family here and everything! This baby also has malaria (rude mosquitoes, really biting a baby,what's wrong with them.) He also has some sort of developmental delay/chromosomal defect going on as well. He has a special little face, and just looks up and giggles at you, Ooh. Can't stand it. I wonder what his future will be like here. I wonder what genetic testing would show. At least he'll have hands he can work with. They look like little spoons right now. I wish I could post a picture of his X-ray! I'm also rambling.

   Our giggliest (yes, it's a word) baby has a tiny lump on the back of her head that's coming off Friday. This baby LOOOVES praise and worship time on the ward, and just bounces along with the music. (Another reason why I miss my Elie-munch niece.)

  Please continue to pray for the lady who we did the partial thyroidectomy on - wrote about her a couple of blogs ago. She has both malaria and typhoid and is in our ICU, a very sick lady. It was rather providential that she got her operation at the same time because it's for sure that she would have died by now had she not happened to be onboard to get her surgery. Had she been at home she would have long been gone. She is so sweet - I've never seen anybody come out of delirium, thank us profusely for caring for her and slide back under. She's such a lovely lady and very very sick. I just pray that she's seen the Lord through us. I find the language barrier so difficult. All you can do is pet and love on them and i just feel like it's not enough when I want to talk to them!

  We also have a 6 year old that had iron pieces fleck into his eyes two days ago and tear his cornea. That got sutured up and his iris taken out yesterday. Again, thank the good Lord Dr. Park is here right now. I shudder to think what would have happened to this kid with metal in his eye ripping whenever he moved it, and no doc to do anything about it. Let's hear it for pediatric opthalmologists (whoop whoop!) Kid will still be able to see.

  Please pray also for my grandfather, Peter Gracie, he's suffered a rather large stroke and is in the ICU in St. Augustine's Hospital in Durban, South Africa. My Granny and he got married about 20 years ago and he's really the only grandfather us kids have ever known. He's the sweetest man, kind heart, and Scottish! He's not been responsive for two days now but has been suffering so much in the past few years with terrible pain. Please pray that the Lord would just be merciful to him.

Lots of prayer requests today! Love you all!

Monday, September 5, 2011

"Life may not be the party we expected, but while we're here we may as well dance" - Anonymous

Cuddle time, 30 minutes, three times daily

  We've decided as nurses to go ahead and presume for the order on the charts for the children- seeing's we just about fit it in anyways.

  I have loved the last couple of shifts at work. Our general surgeon is leaving today and we're closing off the general surgery cycle- hernia repairs, hydrocelectomies, hemithyroidectomies and lipoma removals. So we've spent the last few shifts (in the evening) just having fun. Two nights ago, for example, one kid from Germany brought down his guitar to the unit and the staff proceeded to entertain the patients with every raucous praise song we could think of. One of our day volunteers completely took us aback as he busted out the rap! Out came the bongo drums, the children put on their tiny sunglasses and hats and we were all just dancing. Heehee. So wouldn't get away with that at home :-)

  I had a rather sheepish moment when one rather official-looking chap walked onto the unit. Now, i'm the charge nurse and probably am supposed to have some level of dignity but I've found here that the charge nurses are usually the ringleaders in troublemaking, so I fit right in :-) Anyways, this chap had a pink gift bag and (after finishing our song) asked him if he needed any help. He said he was looking for "Lisha van der...(pause)..." and so now I'm good and confused... turns out he's Auntie Cheryl Mackey's neighbor from Van, Texas and he's brought me a gift bag of goodies for my birthday! Thank you auntie Cheryl!!!! He works at Mercy Ship's Headquarters and was coming over to Sierra Leone so now my roomies and I have a chocolate stash! Yeah!!

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Our day out - Tribe Wanted at John Obey Beach

Beach bums, one and all. What Dad calls "sufferin' for Jesus overseas" heehee. Fran, Caris, Jo and Claire.

Lunchtime! Fish they just caught, a mountain of rice, tomato sauce with onions. Yummo!


A goat and two chickens

  Four lovely friends and I climbed into a poda-poda headed off to John Obey beach today, gamely heading out through the pelting rain in hopes for a sunny beach. We were amply rewarded with few showers and enough sunshine to turn me pink. Very nice.

  The adventure though is usually in the getting there or getting back. Going there, I did a double take as I leaned forward to tap the shoulder of my friend sitting in front of me, "Dude, there's a chicken napping at your feet." Sure enough, swinging merrily away in a grocery bag hanging on the railing in front of her, a happily snoozing chicken. Little did it know its days are probably numbered and was probably a tasty supper tonight for somebody.

  On the way back, the back of the poda-poda gets opened, and a tiny goat gets tied to the back of the last seat. Then another dude climbs in, holding a vehemently squawking chicken. Rather funny 'cause every time the taxi door slid open or shut, the chicken would voice it's opinion on the matter. So we giggled the whole way back anytime we had a stop. The goat got out across from the Osman Tolo shops as we continued on to Savage Square, where our ship is docked.

  Lovin' me this cross-cultural experience.