Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Patients, New Believers, Heroines




March 21, 2010

Tempestuous start to the hot season here, interrupted by welcome respites of cool rain. Hear our friends in Tulsa, OK are under snow right now, preventing our anesthetist friend, Sandy, from taking off this AM. Awaiting her arrival for 2 much needed surgeries for patients from the Children’s Center!

Following up on last blog: Dubis’s, the 52 yr. old woman with the suspected uterine cancer whose surgery was made possible by donations from our Tulsa Sunday school class, had a hyatidiform molar pregnancy. There will be followup hormone studies for awhile to be sure she remains cancer free. She returned last weekend, having opened up the incision and needing admission with us for IV antibiotics, but is recovering now at home. Thanks for making her diagnosis and surgery possible! We are SO thankful for the relationship John has with the private city hospital and the generosity of the OB-GYN surgeon there. This is not the first time he’s donated his skills and time!

Andrea, the 11 year old whose mom died this past year, has made a decision to follow Jesus in her young life, and with several others having made the same decision in our Sunday School class, we are following her closely to be sure she gets the discipling she needs to be fruitful. Christine, the lab director who is teaching our wee one’s Sunday school class, has bonded to Andrea and is studying regularly with her. Christine is a very timely addition to our church, with the departure of our Guatemalan pastor and family. We are beginning to see some fruit from our 5 years of teaching here….perhaps the 12 strong men I’ve been praying for to form the base of our church group will be mostly youth! Jorge, a 13 year old from a very troubled family, has chosen recently to follow the Lord and arrives sparkling and eager to study. All are entering the time of most temptation in their lives here, their teens. Few make it through unscathed. Pray for the 6 youth that are beginning their walk with the Lord.

This month, I have graduated 6 new students from the nurse’s aide class, so we again have a “pool” from which to select new employees. One has been hired at the children’s center, and another comes on board tomorrow in the hospital. Because of a 3 week planned trip to the US beginning this week, I am sad to not be able to orient her as I’d desired! I have also begun the yearly CPR training, difficult as we can’t afford to pay them to come in on time off and our low staffing doesn’t allow them the leisure of escaping during work time to take the course. But slowly, 3-5 at a time, I am plowing thru the list of nursing staff and doing a 6 hr DVD course with all. Learning from the example of our neighbor, Dr. Don, I put the basics of CPR to a song they all know to hopefully improve retention. I will complete the last group of staff when I return in 3 weeks.

The most inspirational person in my last month has been Liz, who directs the Children’s Center with Iain. They are increasingly getting very difficult kids and babies, as the equivalent of our DHS system has discovered them and are sending them hard cases. Among the recent arrivals was Louis, an 8 yr. old that began coming to our Sunday School. He has now been a patient for over 2 weeks in the hospital, so becoming well-known to all of us. He had an abdominal surgery right before coming here that has left him with some complications, so is awaiting surgery, in much pain at times. Also a patient for several weeks now is little 8 month old Orlin, with head injuries from abuse. He needs a feeding tube to prevent or control the constant aspiration from bottle feeding, so he too is awaiting a surgery. Both were admitted right as iain left for a planned return to his homeland, Scotland. While we “feel” for Liz as she has been a constant fixture in the pediatrics ward, rarely leaving the 2 untended , the blessing has been the chance to see the character and resilience of Liz, making it work with her own son at home and she at the hospital. Her ever-cheerful presence in a full ward, listening to and encouraging the other young women, has not only been inspirational but VERY helpful in being able to address the needs she sees close up there. Thankful for the chance to know the “real” Liz, and be able to rub shoulders with another giant in the faith.

2 comments:

  1. Thanks for the update. Life here is pretty bland. Work go home, do chores. You know the routine. We are helping our son in law Joe and daughter Lindsay, put together a vet clinic here in sutherlin. Hope to have it open by mid summer. Right now he is a mobil clinic working out of his truck. Have been biking some, gettimg in shape for our annual spring and summer rides. Have been working on our 40th also. It will be here before we know it. Hope to hug you then and do some catch up. My brother was down from Alaska for a week with his son. Mom and Dad were glad to see them. tals soon scott

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  2. Thanks so much for keeping us posted!! My mind is filled with wonderful memories when you write! Do you get our updates?

    Cyndy for the McCollums

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