Tuesday, September 22, 2009

letter from Mukinge to Cheryl

Dear One,
Them phone line was nonop over a few days last week and so mail got bunched.
I’m on call this weekend for the WHOLE hospital. YIKES. So far so good as I have yet to run into any major catastrophe. There has been a major premie epidemic since my arrival however. We are kicking a set of 2 day old twins out of their incubator (1.7 & 1.3 kg) in order to get two other Unrelated babies into a separate incubator each. NO IV’s just ng feeds. Gave a talk re NRP (newborn resuscitation) Thurs. It bore fruit this morning as a ZEN (Zambia educated nurse) bagged a kid for 30’ and got her back. I did rounds today and saw Burkitt’s (lymphoma), Kaposi’s (sarcoma), Hansen’s (leprosy) and a tree-felling accident (Newton's Disease??).
I sent an email yest for the 3-5 year old class. I hope it can get to them before I return. Walked into town yesterday and bought you two of the more fashionable kesapis about. It will make you proud. I spent a little over $5.
I am feeling remarkably fit, well rested and comfortable. The rains have stopped and nights are quite cool and crystal clear. The southern cross and alpha & beta Centauri are just over there. Saw the Coal Sack, Beehive, Large Magellanic cloud, Canopus and a bunch of constellations which are even less obvious than up Nawth. Orion is still very recognizable even if he has fallen on his front rather than his back.

Letter to a Christian sister from Mukinge 2001

Dear Lisa,
Thank you for the unexpected pleasure of your email. I really appreciate the letter here which is at times so different from home.
I can’t tell you how priveledged it feels to be here with these people. Today I was able to see a smile on a child’s face which is 1-3 Burkitt’s Lymphoma, to talk to a man about his Leprosy and to help a man with Kaposi’s Sarcoma (& almost undoubtedly AIDS) get some sleep. A little 1 day old girl who was seizuring all Sun & Monday is going to survive perhaps with my help.
But the greatest privledge is the amazing experience of coming so far and only to find myself in the middle of a Christian family. Cultural differences are real and language is a huge barrier but we are all just sinners who for no good reason have been forgiven and brought into the family. These subsistence farmers have a much better sense of who they are and what is important than many of us including me.
Tomorrow, the school here is going to climb the little hill behind the hospital for sunrise services. I am on-call this weekend but have traded off to get the time free for the service. I will have the joy of celebrating Easter a good 8 hours before you, the same time zone as Jerusalem, I find.
Your brother in Jesus our Living lord,
Walt B

Letter from Mukinge to a high school friend and believer 2001

Dear Nancy,
Sorry I havn’t written recently despite your long and interesting email. I have tried out some of the sites and they are most enlightening. But not alll yet! I havn’t even begun with your own pastors site, except for his opening discussion of the Talmud.
I am a little separated from web access at the moment. My most pressing problem are malaria (not mine) and trichuriasis (you don’t really want to know). I have been here over a week and it is quite liveable. The people are poor but wonderful and I enjoy worshiping with them. Rather to the point sermons also. I cannot believe the basic poverty. I see kwashiorkor (sever protein malnutrition, every poster kid you saw for Biafra in the early 70’s) kids and count them by the dozen. One died this AM. Overwhelming infections (another died this afternoon about 445P). But everyone younger than 40 has all their teeth and nobody smokes! Everyone smiles when I try to greet them with my misanta-mwanii and hand clapping. I am home on the 27th Keep me in your prayers.
Walt Boutwell

Excerpt from letter to brother from Mukinge 2001

Dear Joey,
It was so good to get your mail and to know that two way communication is not just a theoretical event!!
The seasons are cold then dry then rains then warm and dry. We are entering the latter which is from Apr. or May to July, a tropical Autumn…..
(about lecturing)…..However, it is fun to teach people who want to learn (and impossible to teach those who know they are well-informed). I usually start my own talk on infant feeding with the 1749 battle of Culloden (as all really good lectures do, you know), go on to the “Gin Epidemic” and then wing it! …..
Thank you for your prayers and kind words. However I can’t but help thinking that I should have been doing this with the fat of my life rather than the tail. Please keep praying for this mission.
I am well if a trifle punk about the edges at times. Sleeping under mosquito netting takes some getting used to.



Love ya,

W

Excerpt from a letter to David "Top" Moore, Mukinge 2001

I don’t feel that much of my training or experience is of use here. I have never seen malaria before and here literally everyone has it. For adults it means a nasty day of two with aches chills and fever. For kids under five it may kill, wreaks their nutrition and stunts their growth. Kids are weaned at 9m and the mother rapidly get pregnant again thereafter. The baby is breast fed (&therefore well nourished) but the older kid (now 1.5 years old) is fed slices of thick corn mush (called 'nsheema) almost exclusively; moderate calories and low quality, low amount protein. Picture the red-headed bloated belly, apathetic toddler. Many die.
As an experience it is astounding, as a service, I hope to be a little more help than trouble. In all humility, this is following the guidance I have been given. I don’t need to solve problems here, little or big. I have to be faithful

Letter to my sister from Mukinge 2001

Dear Bea,
Thanks for writing back. It seems like I should have a lot of free time but I always fill it. Today (sat the 7th) I had to iron my underwear as well as the rest of my kit. Had it washed yesterday & dried on the line (no dryers) and today I get to steam to death the mango fly eggs which were laid on it yesterday. It seems that if you don’t they hatch & mistake you for unripe fruit. Two rather painful instars later they emerge as maggots.
Went to the provincial capital yesterday, Solwezi. Luanda chief’s residence and all. He is Chief Solwezi, no less. Town looks like a clip from “A Girl like Alice” and your average western. Fewer horses and more people. Met a man who was starting a training school for older orphans, walked out to the site 2 miles away. He was a foster child of one of the missionaries at Mukinge. An interesting afternoon. Drove back with r hand drive. Only thing I couldn’t remember is to use the turn signal instead of the windscreen washer. Every time I forgot great peals of laughter from the 9 MH workers with me.
Zambia is a lot like one's prejudices suggest and not. A women in kesapis (1x2M brightly printed cloth, skirt cum baby-carrier, pot holder, table cloth, blanket, diaper (nappie here) carrying a load of wood on her head. Road side vendors selling corn on the cob roasted for 50Kwacha (about 1.5cents), beggars, piles of small dried fish, post polio paralytic limbs, cataracts, cobras (as road kill), lines of army ants (local name is pishuti), goats lying in the roadway, brilliant flowers, fruit on the trees, dust, bicylcles built for one but carrying three peddling the bare pegs in bare feet, malaria. It is also drinking a coke on an open veranda with painted disney characters wishing me a "cool yule" next to an advertisement for condoms. Wish Roz a happy bd.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Many Thanks

To those who were faithful in praying for me while I was away:

Cheryl Outland-Boutwell
Beatrice Boutwell Readel
Nancy Whitman Cyr
Lisa Cleland
Walt Lilley
Lawrence Phipps
Thomas Moore
Ann Boutwell Moore
Joshua Boutwell
Sarah Boutwell

Report to World Medical Mission on Mukinge

Report on
World Medical Missions
Trip to Mukinge Hospital
Kasempa, NW Province, Zambia
March 26 to April 26, 2001


The Locale and the People:
The Mukinge Hill area is a wide valley running down to a small river which eventually drains into the Zambezi. The hill area undergoes intensive rains during the wet season which was just ending in April. This leads to rutting and washout of the red dirt roads which then bake hard by the end of April. Many of the roads I was driven over, dwindled to foot paths in the further reaches of the district. Mukinge is located a few kilometers from Kasempa the local “Boma”. These were organized around tribal units and have become the government centers with independence. The Boma was about a 40 minute walk from Mukinge. During these trips we would pass about a dozen small villages immediately beside the major footpath. Each village consisted of a half dozen or so thatched mud huts which typically house several nuclear families and perhaps a “mother-in-law or two.” Large villages of several thousands which were the rule a hundred years ago have vanished as the threat of warfare and arab slavers have subsided. Each village appears to be furnished with at least one barking dog and a complementary gaggle of small boys. The later will begin to ask in unison and in severality “How are you?” on the approach of a any westerner. We rapidly learned to turn the tables and say “Moogia biepi?” Kikoande for “How are you?”
Kasempa includes a radio station, district government offices, several private schools of various stripes, a bus station and market. This later consists of a sloping rutted and weed-grown square with a public pump and rows of small shops on streets surrounding the square as well as leading away for a 100 yards or so at seemingly random directions. The shops all seem to offer an almost identical supply of notions, eggs, kesapis, biscuits and toiletries. An open-air market selling bread, dried fish and fresh vegetables adjoins the square. In addition, a clothing market is situated near the market. This consisted of stick-built booths to shield the sun and waist high tables, to display the wares. These consisted of newly made kesapis (1 by 2 meter cotton print material) and old clothes. Of the latter variety I saw near-new T-shirts for a midwest grocery chain among others.
The area around Kasempa and Mukinge Hill is intensely cultivated. Each village is situated among its fields. These are mostly field corn and raised rows of eggplant, okra, tomatoes and onions. During the rainy season vegetables become scarce and small. Very few domestic animals other than a rare goat are in evidence.

Nature of the Facility:
Mukinge Hospital is a 200+ bed hospital in rural Zambia serving the mostly subsistence farmers of the Kuanda tribe. The hospital is a collection of one-story buildings including seven wards, an operating theater, pharmacy, administration building and outbuildings. The wards include 2 pediatric, one male, one female/OB, one male TB, one female TB, one eye/ortho. The pediatrics wards were divided into two, each with approximately 35 patients. The acute ward, “Paeds I,” included mostly malaria which was unresponsive to the usual therapy (chloroquine), complicated or associated with other diseases. Other diagnoses included infections (mastitis, shoulder bursitis), burns, fractures, Burkitt’s Lymphoma and bacterial gastroenteritis. At times I had six patients on the floor waiting for beds.
Patients who were thought to have more chronic conditions were admitted to “Paeds II.” This was therefore the “kwashiorkor” ward. Kwashiorkor produces in the young child, swollen legs, pot-belly, paler skin and reddish hair which is due to a diet deficient in protein, vitamin and micronutirents. Any child with tuberculosis was treated here also. This disease is a cognate for HIV/AIDS. The incidence of HIV+ patients is about 20-24%. Due to this, serological studies for HIV are seldom done as no treatments is available.
Mukinge Hospital was started in 1953 by Dr. Robert Foster, the son of the original missionary couple who started the station through the (then) Sudanese Interior Mission (SIM). Zambia represents an example of a mission giving over authority to the indigenous church, the Evangelical Church of Zambia which it started. Both SIM and ECZ are administratively responsible for the facility. Since independence in 1963, the government has sought to have closer ties with Mukinge as it supplies needed health resources for a large area of rural countryside. For this reason, Mukinge has contracted to supply in-patient and out-patient care to the population under government support. However, the government hospitals are less well supplied than Mukinge, despite better access to transportation. While I was at Mukinge, a number of patients who had been seen in the provincial capital, Solwezi, came to Mukinge by foot or bus in order to see the doctors there.
One boy with Burkitt’s Lymphoma had been waiting for medication in Solwezi for several months. His huge tumor had eroded through his face in two places, closing his right eye. Five days of medication (Vincristine, Cytoxan, and prednisone) reduced his tumor size by twenty-five percent and allowed him to start eating again. Five more courses would most likely result in a cure (90% 5 year survival) if the medications could be obtained and given properly.
The nature of medical care changes dramatically in the third world. One young mother brought her 4 month old son to the hospital at night after a two day walk from her village. The infant evidenced severe respiratory distress, cyanosis and lethargy. He had been treated for pneumonia several times without benefit. He however, had a huge liver and large heart associated with a single loud S2, dramatic evidence of congestive heart failure. He also had the typical appearance of trisomy 21, Down Syndrome. By the next morning, diuretics and oxygen had helped his condition and a chest x-ray was consistent with my suspicions of a severe form of cyanotic congenital heart disease, Transposition of the Great Vessels. In the best of circumstances, this child had some chance of normal cardiac function in a good tertiary hospital immediately after birth. Even then, a substantial palliative procedure would have allowed continued growth for many years. But no intracardiac procedure was available either here or in Lusaka, the capital. Moreover, none would have been done for a child with so little potential for compete recovery. On reexamination of the baby, he now appeared to have gotten over the little honeymoon provided by the previous night’s treatment and was rapidly worsening, typical of this kind of heart defect; he was within hours of dying. I tried to explain this through a translator. It would have been unnecessarily cruel to try to bring this mother to a true understanding of her baby’s disease only to say we could do nothing. Instead, I said that the baby’s heart was not fully developed and that he would get sicker and die from this and that we had no treatments for it. We prayed at the bedside and the mother wanted to know if she and the baby could go home now. I told her that the baby would die during the two day walk and her response was that she wanted to be home to bury him. With all the other patients, I didn’t see her leave.

Insights
Inserting yourself into a foreign culture produces a huge number of insights from the trivial to the occasionally profound. I undoubtedly received more blessings from those I met than what little I provided. Nevertheless, I think the most profound insight was voiced by a medical student with whom I was traveling. He stated that he had discovered that “People live here.” This is no longer “Central Africa” to me but a few square miles of Kuanda homes and fields populated by people who are wise and foolish, strong and weak, saved and lost. They have no more essential spirituality nor veniality than suburban America. They still have to answer the same questions we all do. Their problems loom on their emotional horizon just as emphatically as ours. Their problems seen from afar seem overwhelming and inexorably triumphant. Seen from up close, the people will deal with them in some fashion. There are mature Christian brothers and sisters who are dealing with their own problems, making their lives, responding to the urgings of the Holy Spirit. If there is one regret that I had, it was the baseline presumption that as a Western doctor, I had peculiar and important expertise out of proportion to anything the Kuanda could produce. This served to separate me from those with whom I wished to fellowship.

Typical Day sent good friday 2001 from Mukinge

To:vfbc
From:
I have had a busy week so far but today is Good Friday, one of the 12 national holidays here and things should be at a slower pace. Yesterday we had a 10% 2degree scalding burn on the abd & legs, a huge Burkitt’s Lymphoma about the size of a volly ball on the face of a 6 year old, half a dozen malaria, a trisomy 21 with probable transposition of the great vessels (TGV) who I discharge to die at home, a Kwashiorkor who died after being discovered moribund in the morning. I started intraosseous fluids and got her to cry, start moving again and have pulses in her extremities again only to return in 90 minutes to find her all wrapped up in her shroud for delivery to the morgue, probably arrythmia. Gave a powerpoint presentation at 1400 on resuscitation. Sent home a kid after cleft lip surgery, sent home three malarias, treated scabies without wreaking the kids skin, took a picture of everyone in the ward and a little girl who was seizuring all Sun and Mon from sepsis will survive. Generally a pretty fair day.

Email from Mukinge, Zambia 4/4/01

Dear Vaughn Forest Family

Greetings from Mukinge, Kasempa District, NW province, Zambia. I have been here since Friday 30, March and am just beginning to see how I might get by. The 2 pediatrics wards are huge (this is the NON busy season) with 35 kids in each. Most have malaria, worms, anemia, burns, breaks and fevers. I have seen kwashiorkor like out of a news film. The first day here I lost a little girl to terminal starvation (& malaria, gastroenteritis and heavens knows what all). I don’t really know what I would do here if it were not for the staff. It is numerically mostly Zambian except for a few Aussies, North Irish, Canadian, English and (yes) Americans about. These folk are really dedicated, smart and tough, (e.g. a “short term” SIM missionary goes for a minimum of 3 years, most do not take malaria prophylaxis therefore) . Very discouraging work at times. AIDS is a piece of the landscape. The station is about half the size it was in the 60’s (30 now).
On the 31st I went to town, Kasempa which is “the Boma” meaning British office of military administration or something; quite a hold over from the colonial period, but I think it is aword hijacked from swahili. It was a radio station, a power plant (something of a episodic endeavor), an emigration office (I have to go tomorrow to prove that I have a ticket home) and a few dozen shops around a deeply gullied plaza littered with dogs, trash, bicycles and mothers in kesapis with babies on their backs. A small loaf of bread goes for 1510 Kwacha (about 50 cents).
The day is divided by a 2 hr lunch break so that the workers can walk home and cook their insheera (a rather bland thick maize porridge that is rolled into balls and eaten with the fingers, very efficient). Morning rounds are punctuated by tea and prayers at 10AM. Work continues to almost sun down (very little dusk this near the equator) so that you don’t need a “torch” to avoid the occasional snake, (all high test, no regular). Theatre (ie surgery) was delayed this afternoon as the chief (&only) surgeon had to extract a 7 ft cobra from his garden. They keep the ‘bushy mice” population in check donchaknow.
The weather is quite humid and warm into the low 80’s but nights are cool and damp(we’re at 4000ft). It is heading into winter and the dry season so that it only rains a few times a day now with bright sun in between. Tonight is one of the few nights which doesn’t have something I feel I must go to so I am trying to keep up with the mail. Please remember me in your prayers and write if you find time.