This is re-blogged from my friend Australian nurse Deb Louden's blog, "Deb's Heart in Africa". Read down a bit to get an update on the young mother she asked us to pray for.
Working in this hospital is very different to working in a
hospital at home for several different reasons. I like to stand back and watch
things going on in the wards, the interactions between patients and their
caregivers, patients and others caregivers and patients and fellow patients. In
so many little things I see sweet community at work.
Unlike at home, our patients lay in their beds’ side by
side, talking about things like how they found Mercy Ships, how they felt about
the way they looked before they got to have surgery, how much it would have
cost them if Mercy Ships hadn’t turned up, how they became sick and so on.
There are always conversations going on and sometimes I ask them what they are
discussing- the other day it was Primus, the local beer and one time about the
Chinese eating weird things like flies.
A fair number of patients in D ward (the Maxillofacial ward
that I work in) each field service stay for an extended period of time, perhaps
two to three months. These patients become part of our D ward family and
although the patients in the beds beside them may come and go, community is
still built amongst them.
This precious boy stayed with us from Nov-Jan |
Other things in the ward community which are unique are the
caregivers sleeping under the bed. When you are walking between patient beds’
you have to be careful that you don’t tred on limbs sticking out from
underneath. I was walking between the beds one night shift, taking a patient’s
blood pressure when I heard whimpering coming from under that bed. I looked down
and saw a small hand under my shoe! Whoops! I quickly lifted my foot and the
whimpering stopped and the hand disappeared back under the bed. Needless to
say, I was much more careful about where I was walking from then on.
These caregivers also make up the community in the ward,
caring for others children, showing the new patients how to do things as well
as looking after their own relative.
There is practically no privacy in the hospital here. All
the doctors’ rounds are in the same room and sometimes when we’re discussing
something no so important, if others in the room are interested, they too will
come and stand in on the conversation and sometimes give their opinion or their
own translation.
Recently we had three patients stay on the ward in beds next
to each other for a period of about three weeks. They all had had a similar
procedure and all had a similar complication and the same treatment. During the
day they all chatted with each other and played games together, treating each
other like brother and sister, they teased and laughed together. On rounds one
morning when the woman in the centre bed was told she could be discharged, she
immediately turned to the guy in the bed next to her telling him that she’d won
the competition. There were smiles all around and genuine joy at seeing her
discharge and then the others too, one by one were able to discharge. But I
will always remember the three of them together, doing what community here does
best.
I love to walk into the ward and be welcomed by huge smiles,
and joy-filled greetings. It hits me in the deepest part of my heart like a
burst of sunshine. We are a family, one big community. We get to care for these
people in their most vulnerable moments and we love on them until the minute
they walk out of our lives, not just the ward.
That is what it is like to work in D ward.
A quick update on Angelique from my plea We Need Your Help:
She's progressing but very slowly. In the last few days she has lost
weight and so we are battling the unknown. Her wounds are slowly
healing, but her weight is swinging up and down. Please continue to
pray for her. It is lovely to see her still happy, able to get in and
out of bed easily and walking the four flights of stairs up to Deck 7
every day for sunshine and fresh air. Here she is with her mother,
enjoying some outside time. Thank you for praying, please don't stop
yet!!!
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