Exploring Medicine 2014
Honduras
Thursday, April 3, 2014
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
Team Comments...from the mountains!!
3/26
Bienvenidos! We made
it to Honduras with no difficulty with check-ins or luggage whatsoever! We were
tired since we all met up at 3:45 in the morning, but very happy and relieved, we
made it to our host’s home, Heifer, with delicious dishes waiting to be
consumed by us! Yummm!
That night we had some delightful festivity to honor Mr.
Reynaldo’s Aponte’s 20 years of amazingness here in Honduras. Really though,
I’m sure he and the outreach team had helped probably at least 10,000 men,
women and children for the past 20 years! It was a great celebration and it
really puts in perspective what we are about to do the next few days.
Later that night, the real party started, we began organizing
and sorting the medications in little packets. :) Thank you all for your
donations…we have so many medications!
3/27
Road trip!! As Ms. Penny Cooper had said, she is very
impressed we were all ready to go by 0600. I think that made us the best team
so far. ;)
We visited the hospital in Las Esperanza today and let me
tell you their staff was very nice. Being a nurse from the states, I felt very
fortunate to have the resources I have. The nurses here had 15 patients with 2
nursing assistants. Patients bring their
own medications in the hospital to be treated. The high-risk pregnant women
stay in the hospital and can actually cook their meals on wood burning ovens!
We were told, this hospital is government funded and it doesn’t cost families
to come here to be treated!
We got to Itubuca and were greeted warmly by the mayor of
the region and the director of Heifer. We discussed our itinerary for the next
few days and apparently people living in far villages are traveling in a truck
to see us! We set up pretty much the whole clinic today and slept early since
after all…the next couple days will be busy!
Lights out!
PS
Penny and Dawn killed a fairly large scorpion. No big.
3/28
And so it begins.
I must tell you, coming from someone who barely speaks and
understands Spanish I was very surprise that by the end of the day, I was able
to ask them about their problems, how long have they been having it or even
give instructions in Spanish! Broken Spanish but nonetheless they understood
it.
One of the things that absolutely touched my heart was when
Ashley, Sarah and I, Karla, were teaching this boy about his medications and
asked if he had any other questions. His response was, “No, thank you.” To me
that meant so much, because I felt that we were really making a difference in
their lives and not just putting a band aid. He even asked Ashley and I for our
pens for school and well we gave it to him with no hesitation.
Ellen, Penny, and Heather had a family of five. Mom was
blind and father had visual difficulty and is illiterate. The kids’ ages are, 5
and 2 years old and 2 months ago. All of them had different types of infections
and the most difficult part was teaching and making sure they receive
appropriate interventions. After pulling
resources and coordinating with the pharmacy staff, AKA, Rosa, Monica, and
Michelle, they used visual aids by using different colors on packets for the medications
as well as emphasizing the different shapes and sizes of the pills. Even though
they had spent over an hour with the family, it was an hour well spent. Everyone really worked together to make sure
this family receives their treatment.
Everyone worked tirelessly today and it’s a great way to end
the day on top of the hill hearing cows moo and roosters do their
cock-a-doodle-do…and yes they do them even in the late afternoon.
Rosa sends love to Igor, Andrea and Natalya! <3
3/29
Saturday. It sure didn’t feel like Saturday! We were up and
early! Brett and I, Karla, were even able to squeeze in a nice little run up
and down the mountains before opening a clinic! We even joined Michelle for a
quick yoga stretch. Alicia and Dawn also went for a lovely short hike (see
pictures! Won’t see anything like that in Durham, NC! Or well maybe ;)
I’d say, today went by much smoother than yesterday even
though it was much busier. I’m not sure whether it’s because we all became very
comfortable with our assessments and diagnosis or maybe it’s due to our Spanish…it’s
getting better! Kun-wei and Ellen are doing marvelous in their Spanish!
I think what I like most about today is seeing the teamwork
and patience of everyone including our patients. We would have group of 3’s and
only one person fluent in Spanish and yet, for example Heather, shows no
frustration with talking, explaining to the patients, and teaching us with
Spanish. Our patients get a laugh with our broken Spanish. They even smile and
correct our grammar!
One of the things I wanted to mention was the project the
ABSN students, Travis, Monica, Ellen, Brett and Michelle, are doing that is
absolutely making a difference here in Honduras. They are promoting dental
hygiene! Where’s a dentist when you need one! But yes, those toothbrushes you
folks donated are making their way through the rural villages of Honduras and
they love it! One of the patients today struck Monica, Reynaldo, and Ashley
when they presented a toothbrush to a nine years old boy and he did not know
what it was. Of course they made a game out of it and taught the boy how to
brush his teeth and how often he has to do it a day but nonetheless we can only
really imagine how many more children or people have never really heard of what
a toothbrush is. I hope what we have reaches those who need them most. Things
like these definitely make us step back and really appreciate what we have in
life.
Can I just tell you all about our meals? So delicious! It’s so hard not to get
seconds. Really! So fresh and tasty! Got to love our host for preparing all our
meals. They have been so wonderful!
3/30
Sunday Funday Honduras style! :)
To enrich
our cultural experience we decided to join the village to their church. It was
an interesting experience; men sit on one side, and women and children site on
the other. When they noticed we had started flocking in, they had cleared the
first two rows in the men side and let us all sit there. Mind you there are 17
of us (14 women and 3 men). This just shows how welcoming they have been to us!
Hola, it’s Ashley here with my two
cents about our awesome church experience. Like Karla said, the men cleared two
rows for us so that we could sit down even though there were other women
standing in the back for the service. To be one hundred percent honest, this
was the first time that I felt like we were making a difference in this
community. It just really made me reflect on the experiences at church back
home and how Americans sometimes have this “think about me first” attitude. It
was just so refreshing to be with people who have little to nothing, but would
still give you the shirt off their backs without a second thought.
Brett here with a guest post! This
afternoon 3 of the ABSN students, Monica, Michelle and I, worked together as a
team seeing our own patients. It was an incredibly uplifting and empowering
experience, and we worked so fluidly as a team. It was so wonderful to work
together with these brilliant nurses-to-be. We were able to all pitch in and
switch roles throughout patient visits, so that each of us took turns
interviewing or assessing our patients, explaining medications, or requesting
consultations from the providers! Everyone’s Spanish is improving so much, but
we still made a few pretty hilarious mistakes, such as when I asked our patient
if he noticed his rash getting worse when he got hungry. I meant hot! He looked
at me as if I spoke.. well, broken Spanish. One of our favorite patients came
in with two other preteen girls, and she was incredibly confident, not
something you see often in preteen girls anywhere, but especially in Las
Mercedes.
This is an excerpt of our conversation:
Nursing students: Buenas tardes, como podemos ayudarle hoy?
Patient: Good afternoon.
Nursing students: GOOD AFTERNOON! Tu hablas ingles! Muy
bien!
Patient: Washington.
Nursing students: Ok…
… Later on, discussing a rash on her shoulders…
Nursing students: Que se vestio para trabajar?
Patient: Nada!
Nursing students: Mande?
Patient: Washington.
I think we had a little bit of a
language barrier at times, but we got there in the end, our patient received
excellent, at times laughter-inducing care, and we all learned a lot from each
other.
All in all, we were so grateful to be given the autonomy to
run our own mini clinic this afternoon. Let’s do it again tomorrow!
3/31
That sure went by fast! Can’t
believe it’s Monday! It was a very busy morning and a fairly relaxing
afternoon. It’s unfortunate that we are running out of toothbrushes, lotions,
cough medications, etc. and we still have half a day left.
I worked with Rey and Alicia today
and I would say that my favorite patients would have to say the grandparents
who brought their cute little grand daughters. Wait, how can I forget about the
two best friends who told us they wanted to be nurses. Soon as I heard that my heart
melted! Or what about the two little girls who accompanied their mother and
played with Penny’s stethoscope. If only you can see those pictures! ;) By the
way, the grandparents came back later that day and gave us potatoes that we ate
for dinner.
One thing I want to just emphasize
is how welcoming they have been to all of us. Ashley, Heather, Michelle and I
had a chance to visit a lady who had an infant last night. And wow…that was eye
opening. The family didn’t have much…and yet they are so happy and so content.
As Ashley had put it, what they have you can see as you walk in to their home.
Totally
blog-bombing on Karla here—it’s Ashley again. To further the experience at the
home with the newborn, I just wanted to comment on how different it is here
compared to our culture when it comes to childbirth. The mom had delivered her
baby at home and upon assessment, we noticed that she did not even (getting
graphic here—not for the weak stomached) have underwear or pads to catch the
bleeding; this kind of broke my heart a bit. Throughout the trip at the clinic,
I did not stop to think about where these people were coming from because
appearances can be so deceiving, especially when people dress their best to
come see us. The trip to the house tied the whole rural Honduran picture
together for me that yes, these people are extremely poor and have to work so
hard for the simplest of things that we take for granted like a proper stove to
cook on, or a floor to keep the bugs out.
04/01
Another blog-bomber, Michelle here, to share my experience
taking corn on the cob to tortilla! Shout out to my wonderful teachers Martha
and Gloria. They both prepared so many amazing meals for us. You wouldn’t
believe the vegetables and fruits here.
The tortilla making process began last night. Well, let me
correct that actually. Technically the process began a few days ago when the
freshly cut corn was put out in the sun to dry. When I asked how long it takes
for them to dry, Gloria simply said, “Well just when they’re dry, that depends
on the sun I guess.” The women showed me how to remove the dry kernels using
our fingers or using the bare cobs. Disclaimer… not as easy as it sounds. We
added water to our “cubeta”(bucket) of corn and then sifted in lime stone
powder. We washed the corn and removed dirt and leaves and set the corn the
stove to cook. Again, just until they knew it was ready, no set time. We pulled
it off the stove and it sat overnight.
In the morning we carried the cubeta of corn to the local
store to wash again in the outdoor sink, and grind inside the store. We first
used a hand grinder with a hand-urned wheel type mechanism to crush the corn.
To smooth out the mixture, we added water and then ground the corn on a big
stone grinder. This would finish the dough for the tortillas, made of only
corn, water and a little bit of lime powder. Between Martha, Ellen and I it
took about an hour to grind just half the corn. Ellen and I got quite the work
out, and Martha was moving right along! Mind you, she is a tiny woman, maybe
five feet tall. She told us, “This is what I do starting early in the around
4:30/5:00am until the evening, every day. We eat tortillas every meal”. I asked
if she ate things along with the tortillas, and she said sometimes they have
rice and beans, but usually just tortillas. It was really an amazing experience
to learn how to make tortillas, experience a bit more of the culture, and spend
lovely time with one of the local women.
The bus ride
The team is spending the day in transit. They left Las Mercedes at 7am and have stopped periodically to enjoy the sights. They stopped in Esperanza to eat and shop in the market, which included some cool basket woven bowls. Dr. Clements says the team should arrive in Copan around 4pm. Then more clinic in the morning!
Dr. Clements says the students should have internet access in Copan, so check back very soon to find some of their blog posts and pictures uploaded here.
Dr. Clements says the students should have internet access in Copan, so check back very soon to find some of their blog posts and pictures uploaded here.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)