Sunday, July 28, 2013

Oxygen flowmeters have arrived!!!

our beautiful oxygen flowmeters!


I’ve (Aaron) been wanting to post this blog for a long time but haven’t made the time to sit down to write it for the last month. But alas, this Sunday afternoon I’ve found a few minutes of peace, where I’m not tired (already had a nap!). 
The last 5 months I’ve been rounding in the Pediatrics ward. A problem that we have all over the hospital is lack of oxygen. Yes, we are around 7,500 feet above sea level ( I call it the mile and half high village) and the air is thinner up here as every visitor is reminded of as they walk around up here. But we have no oxygen concentrators that will increase the amount of oxygen in the air from 21% to 100% for people with lung disease, pneumonia, or other medical issues that require more oxygen. 
Sometime this past year a big concentrator was attached to the peds ward and piped to 6 “outlets” next to the beds. It seems like pneumonia as well as gastroenteritis/dehydration are our most common illnesses here and one day I came in for rounds and found 8 kids ages 2 months to 10 years being treated for pneumonia. As I rounded I kept seeing oxygen saturations of 86%, 88% even 82% (normal is at least 90% but for kids 94%) but those kids weren’t on oxygen because they appeared stable to the staff. The real issue was that they didn’t have enough oxygen flowmeters to get the oxygen to the patients that needed it. The hospital instead had to go 2 hours on rough roads 1 or 2 times per week to pick up expensive and large 5 ft oxygen canisters for some of the patients. I’m sure you could google or look on youtube to see some of dangers of having those “metal missiles” around.  And some of the kids were getting oxygen via a small concentrator that the ward had borrowed from the other wards (making me think “what sick adults had to give up their oxygen concentrators to let these kids have oxygen”). Not only that but all the kids were sharing the oxygen coming out of the machines by using a splitter and having 2 sets of tubing going to 2 different patients. The problem with that is that you really don’t know how much oxygen they are getting and if you are ready to take one child off the oxygen you need to do it gradually but if the other child is not ready to be weaned from oxygen then you just wait…a day or maybe 3 or 4.
I thought it was crazy that the ward had a very expensive machine (large oxygen concentrator), had paid around $10,000 to have that machine installed and piped to 6 beds. But we were only using it at 1/3 of its capacity because we didn’t have 4 more flowmeters that would only cost about $800 total.
So after rounds I went up to purchasing and asked them to price 5 oxygen flowmeters for the peds ward so we could access the oxygen for the babies/children who needed it. He said he would get back to me.
Not only did I want to share this story to say thank you for all those who have given toward the ministry here but also to show what goes into a typical “project” here. This is not meant to be derogatory toward anyone here. I only share it as an example of how different things are here and how difficult getting something so vital and “simple” can be. Believe me there are 1,000 other places on this continent that make Kapsowar look like a breeze, but this isn’t their blog!
I was called by the nursing officer a few days later and told the flowmeters were purchased a couple of days ago and should arrive on Sunday (in 3 days). He told me the price, which was about what we anticipated, and asked if I could get the payment to the hospital to pay for them. So I went to the bank and withdrew the amount from our account later that day and gave it to finance the next day.

 Monday I went for rounds and…no flowmeters on the wall. “I’m sure they are in still in the nursing officer’s office” I said to myself. Later that day he told me he had the flowmeters and would have them checked and installed that day. The next day…no flowmeters. I looked for the nursing officer but couldn’t find him all day. So a couple of days later I found him and he said they had ordered the wrong flowmeters. The new OR building had different outlets and these flowmeters were ordered to fit them, not the ones in pediatrics. So they returned these and began looking for the correct ones. A week went by, no word. Another week…another 5-6 kids with pneumonia seen in peds ward…no flowmeters. A week later or so I asked again and they said they  are working on it and we should have some within the next few days. Not to drag this on but I want you to see how painful this was! 

Anyway, 6 weeks later they tell me there are some available at Tenwek Hospital (a large Christian hospital about a 6 hour drive away). The other good news was that we had another nursing officer whose family lived near Tenwek and he was going to visit them next week. I spoke with him and he was confident he could get them during his visit. By this point it was May and I had originally paid the money mid-March. He returned from his visit with his family the next week but still no flowmeters. He said he spoke to his contact there but when he went to meet him the other man didn’t show up and didn’t answer his phone. So he came back to Kapsowar without them. The good news was that he was going back next week and felt confident he could get them then. He was delayed in going by a week so the NEXT next week he returned. He stayed this time for a week and I was eager to hear from him about his success story. He came to my house the next day and said he was able to get the flowmeters BUT they needed an attachment for a humidifier bottle and he took them to Nairobi and left them there to have them added.

 Only one was ready when he had to leave so instead of splitting up the order he just left them all there. Then he said (and I quote) “You may want to see about getting some flowmeters from somewhere else. Maybe you have a friend in America that could send them over.” WHAT? After all this he is telling me that we might need to start over! I told him I thought we should stick with these flowmeters in Nairobi and he said that would be fine. About 10 days later he told me someone had sent the flowmeters from Nairobi to Eldoret and tomorrow someone would be bringing them to Kapsowar. That next afternoon I asked if they had arrived and he said the driver left late and didn’t realize how bad the road from Eldoret to Kapsowar was and made it half way but turned around because he wasn’t sure he could make it here before dark. The next day was Sunday and I saw the nursing officer at church and he told me the driver should be here that afternoon. 

The next morning I was walking into work and passed him carrying a box. I’m sure my eyes lit up! He said they had arrived and was sending them to the “procurement” department to assess them and they should be available tomorrow. Lo and behold 2 days later we had 4 (not 5 but who’s counting by this point!) oxygen flowmeters. I told the nurses we should celebrate by turning them all on high and breathing in fresh oxygen for a few minutes but we decided to just drink some tea and thank God for them instead!!!!
So thank you to all our supporters. We could not have purchased them without you. We hope to have another ministry update blog posted later this week!

Flowmeter behind a patient
2 girls outside (I guess Sonya just liked this picture!)


patient with a congenital heart defect needing oxygen to keep her oxygen level up.

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Feasting with our friends....new and old




The first “feast” I would like to share about was with our house helper, Eunice, and her family. We had been talking about having them all over for PIZZA for several weeks and finally it happened. Her children were so excited to come over and try our “American” food. We fixed one pepperoni and one ham and pineapple pizza. After trying both, the children agreed that they liked the pepperoni better. Then, of course, we topped it off with some homemade chocolate chip cookies! Those were a big hit for everyone. After our meal we enjoyed fellowshipping with them. The younger girls were so excited to play with Braelyn and Layna and all their toys! The older boys watched a movie with Aaron on his computer. It was really nice to get to host this sweet family that we love so much. We are hoping to have one more pizza night get together before we leave in August.





The next “feast” was with our good friends from Tennessee who we met during college at UT Knoxville. They had come to Kapsowar to serve for a few weeks and we were so blessed to have them here. We wanted them to get to experience some real Kenyan food so I asked Eunice and her sister Edna if they would prepare a Kenyan meal for us one night. They were really excited to get to cook their favorite foods for us. We had beef stew (beef, carrots, peas) and rice, mashed potatoes, ugali (which is a staple food at almost every meal in Kenya, similar to grits but more stiff and dry), cooked cabbage, rice pilau (which is rice with bits of carrots and peas and special seasoning in it), chipati (which looks like a tortilla, but is a bit thicker. This is also a favorite Kenyan food), and mango juice (freshly blended). Kenyans do not eat this much food at every meal. Eunice and Edna told us that this was the kind of spread that they would prepare for Christmas or a wedding. Typically, Kenyans will eat ugali with cabbage or sakuma wiki(which is like spinach and tomatoes sautéed together) or they also eat a lot of rice and beans. Meat is not a regular part of their diet because it is expensive. So, we were extremely blessed to enjoy this delicious meal and were so thankful to Eunice and Edna for making it for us. It was so DELICIOUS!!

 (Eunice and Edna working hard to prepare our meal....so thankful for them!)




 And as you can see from the pictures our girls had a wonderful time playing with their new friends too! It was a very blessed time of fellowship and fun!! We thank God for sending them to Kapsowar while we were here.

New towels and bedding for duplex!







I apologize for how long it has taken me to post about this wonderful blessing we received from a couple of our churches back home. There is a duplex here on the station which was recently renovated by a couple of volunteers from the US. They worked very hard to make improvements to these living areas so that they would be functional for short term volunteers and/or long-term doctors to live in. It is a real blessing to be able to have this duplex in functioning condition so that more volunteers are able to come and help meet needs here in Kapsowar. Each side has two bedrooms and one bath. All of these renovations were made possible by donations from churches in California, where these men were from. Now, I am happy to say that through the generosity of some Sunday school classes from First Baptist Dandridge, TN and Calvary Baptist Church in Bristol, TN, we were able to help complete this project by helping furnish mattress covers, new sheets for each bed, shower curtains, bath mats, towels, and washcloths. Lord willing, these items will be used for years to come and will be a great blessing to the many, many people who will come to serve here in Kapsowar.

I am so thankful for our church families back home who are eager and willing to help give to meet needs and be a blessing to others. Thank you to all who were involved in this project! Everyone here in Kapsowar(Americans and Kenyans) who heard about and saw all that was given were so, so thankful for this generous gift. They kept telling me to make sure I let everyone back home know how thankful and appreciative they were to receive these blessings! 

To God be the glory!!