Monday, July 31, 2017
Faudhia Goes Home
Faudhia before discharge |
Great news when we arrived this morning to begin our second
week at Mazimbu! Fuadhia has shown marked improvement every day since her
surgery and was well enough this morning to be discharged!
And then Doug began the big surgery for the colostomy
reversal. We thank you for your prayers because all in all, it went as well as
could be expected—it did not take longer than Doug had anticipated and he did
not encounter any complications during the surgery. So now our prayer is that Salumu's pain will be manageable and that he will recover without suffering infection.
Our translators are invaluable to our mission and we could not do our work without their help. But as our work has shifted from the front desk and triage over the the surgery part of our work, we do not have as many patients that need the help of a translator to talk with us. So today we had to say goodbye to three of our translators, Juliana, Sarah and Magreth. All three have worked with us in past years and we look forward to seeing them again in future years.
From left to right, Sarah, Eileen, Juliana, Glennis and Magreth |
From left to right, Sarah, Magreth, Cindy and Juliana |
Will doing another emergency repair on the Bovie, with Cindy and Glennis looking on |
Soldering the Bovie |
We were able to leave the hospital at 5:30, which meant we
arrived back at LJS at 6 pm. Although dinner is served at 6, several of the
team enjoy walking the short distance off campus to a local duka where we can enjoy a beer. This is
a small, local storefront owned by Rosemary, who lives in back with her family.
When we arrive, we walk behind the duka and
shout “Habari” until the family waves
to let us know they will be right there to help us. Chairs are brought out for
our comfort and we can watch the local life around us. It is very relaxing.
Beers after work |
Rosemary's duka |
Tomorrow will be a long day for us again—the team will be
assisting Dr. Swai, who is doing a gynecological surgery on two of our
patients. And we have three more procedures in addition to those two. Since it
will be a late night, we are planning dinner at one of our favorite
restaurants, the Oasis. Which means we will not be posting to the blog tomorrow
night. But we will catch up with you on Wednesday.
Benedictor, our first patient tomorrow morning |
Sunday, July 30, 2017
Worship at Sokloine
As in many past years, we were again welcomed to worship in
Sokoine parish with our brothers and sisters in Christ. Hospitality among the
Maasai is of the utmost importance. When our daladala pulled up into the churchyard, there were chairs arranged
under the trees waiting for us. We were invited to sit and one of the village
elders brought water to pour over our hands before eating, holding a basin below
to catch the overflow.
Georgia riding under the seat in the daladala |
Our daladala |
Boiled sweet potato and Maasai chai were offered to all of us. The sweet potato here is not a yam,
but a white sweet potato. And the Maasai make wonderful tea by boiling the tea
in milk, not water. While we were being fortified before service, many of the
men and women of Sokoine came over and shook our hands, one after the other, welcoming
each and every one of us.
Tea before worship |
Maasai do not adhere to a strict time schedule but, instead,
move on to the next activity once the preceding one is done, like moving the
cows or preparing our lunch. So the 10 am service actually began at 11:30 and
lasted 2 hours.
Worship included performances by three different choirs. We
may not understand the Swahili, but the joy of praise needs no translator.
Sokoine altar |
Georgia was given to the pastor as the offering from the
team. She was very well received by the congregation and, when the pastor was
thanking us, he assured us the nanny goat would bear twins! He added that next
year, when we visit again, one of her offspring would be in our dinner pot. We
are opting for beans and rice that day.
Cindy presenting the nanny goat Georgia to the pastor |
Chairs were assembled in the church after service and we
were ushered in and offered the luncheon meal—rice, meat in a flavorful broth,
beans, a squash similar to spaghetti squash, and stewed beef. We all enjoyed it
and were bid farewell by our friends until we see them next year.
The team with Sokoine friends |
End of our First week and Maasai Cattle Market
Our work week ended at 7 pm Friday, after another long day
of surgery. During that day we filled our surgery schedule for the rest of our
time here. So the front desk will not be checking in any new patients next week.
This is the fastest we have ever filled all available slots on the schedule.
Dr. Kivuma and Dr. Swai will continue to work with the remaining patients who
have been registered but not yet been seen by a doctor and it will take several
days for all of their test results to be received and reviewed by the doctors.
That means the team will still be busy facilitating that part of our mission,
but the focus has certainly shifted over to the surgical side of our trip.
We invite your prayers, not just for the rest of the trip,
but for a specific surgery Monday morning. A young 20-year-old man, Salumu, suffered
a sudden, severe volvulus last year requiring an emergency colostomy. He was
told to return to Dar es Salaam in December to have it reversed, but when he
arrived and was told the price was 1,000,000 shillings, that was so far beyond
his means as to make the repair impossible. We met with him on Friday, and this
is a surgery that Doug can do, so other patients were moved to later days to
allow Salumu’s procedure to be done on Monday morning. It is a long procedure
with a higher risk of infection, as it deals with the bowel and large
intestine.
Dinner Friday night was a celebration of the end of our
first week’s work with pizza at a local favorite, Dragonaires. It was a great
start to our weekend!
And our weekend continued with a trip to the Maasai cattle
market, accompanied by Kishumu, Eliah and Epsilon. Eliah gave us a bit of
history, which helped with our understanding of some of the Maasai traditions. We
were warmly welcomed and greeted by the Maasai and strolled among the milling
cattle as buyers and sellers discussed prices. Eliah ordered a portion of fresh
roasted goat and beef for our lunch. This is sliced into strips with a machete
and then bite-sized pieces of meat are sliced off of each strip and passed
around. We added several portions of chips
mayai which are French fries fried with scrambled eggs, seasoned with salt
and hot sauce and eaten with a toothpick.
The highlight of our day was witnessing about a dozen Maasai
warriers, including Eliah, singing and dancing. They stand in a circle and
sing/chant rhythmically, following the cues of a leader. Some songs feature
jumping where they will take turns, singly or in pairs (or even threes!) coming
into the center and jumping as high as they can in time with the chanting.
American Basketball coaches must not have seen how high these warriors can jump
or our NBA teams would be full of Maasai!
Just before leaving, Eliah happened to talk to a man and
discovered he was suffering severe after-effects from a spider bite. Eliah
asked Doug to look at the injury and when the man, who we learned was called
Edwin, rolled up his pant leg, his lower leg was overwhelmed by an area of dead
skin about 6” X 8” and the leg is still, 6 weeks after the
fact, swollen to more than double the normal size. In addition, there was a
marked swelling and bulging of a vein that snaked up the inside of the leg and
past the knee. We learned that he had consulted a doctor and surgery was
recommended, but that the price was 350,000 shillings (about $150). He was
trying to raise the money and had collected 130,000 shillings so far. Could we
help? The team withdrew to discuss privately and we all felt like this man
needed our help. So each of us chipped in personally and the money was raised
to make his surgery possible. His gratitude was obvious to all of us and he
welcomed our prayers. We all joined hands to pray with him for his recovery.
Before we left to head back to LJS, the team bought a nanny
goat to bring to worship tomorrow as our offering. Lance has named her Georgia.
Friday, July 28, 2017
A Few Pictures to Share
Slideshow with scenes around Mazimbu
Here is a slide show with pictures from us with our translators at work at Mazimbu.
Here is a slide show with pictures from us with our translators at work at Mazimbu.
Thursday, July 27, 2017
Faudhia
It seems as if every year God clearly shows us the reason why
we are here. That happened yesterday. It was our first day of surgery and we
had a full schedule-5 cases in the major theater and 1 in the minor theater-so
there is no way we could take any additional surgeries for that day. On top of
that, surgeries keep the docs in the OR so we cannot see many new patients to
evaluate for surgery.
But yesterday, despite all of that, Doug was consulted by
a family with a 12-year-old girl that, according to an ultra sound, had an abdominal
cystic mass. This is normally benign and asymptomatic, except for causing some
abdominal distention. When he examined Faudhia, her pulse was 148 and her
respirations were 36. These are seriously bad numbers. One of our team happened to walk in to Doug's exam room
when he was making notes on her chart and he remarked that he was really
worried. The young girl had extreme pain, both on depressing and releasing
pressure, which would indicate a problem far more serious than a cystic mass. Doug
was very worried and wanted to do surgery asap, which he knew meant the
following day IF we could get lab results in time. In
past years, we had been able to get lab results in about an hour. However,
Mazimbu’s machine is broken this year and they have been sending the blood
samples to the main hospital campus, Sua, just a few miles away.
So, if Sua has the same machine, why the longer wait for
results? It seemed a consultation with the head of the lab, David Mwanuka, was the
logical next step. Well, it turns out the delay in results is due to a
transportation issue. The hospital only has one transport--the single
ambulance--and it goes to Sua once a day, at middday, delivering new samples
and picking up results from the previous delivery. We asked if WE could send
a driver over to Sua with the sample and wait for the results. Sure, no
problem. So that is what we did. We had results back by 4 pm and started her
surgery at 5 pm. And it is a very good thing we did. Faudhia had a ruptured
appendix, which, by the timing of the onset of pain and swelling, we think ruptured 4 days
ago. Her abdomen was completely full of pus—2 liters--and other nasty stuff. Had
we not been able to do surgery until the following day, Doug thinks she may not
have survived overnight. And this morning when we arrived for work and checked
on her, she was awake and alert and smiling in bed. Praise God!
After our long day on Wednesday, we enjoyed dinner out under
the stars at one of our favorite restaurants, The Arc Hotel.
Moving to today, the line of patients waiting on our arrival
was substantially longer that the previous two days. And, again, Doug was
booked in the OR with four procedures so his time in clinic would be minimal.
It became clear very quickly that the patients waiting would be all that could
be seen today—we could not take any additional that may come for services. That
is always very hard for us, as Americans, to turn away people that are seeking
help. And of the thirty-one patients that we registered, most had to wait five
or six hours to see the doctor—some even longer. Our last patient was seen at
6:45 pm. But Tanzanians are willing to wait patiently for as long as it takes.
Something we, as Americans, would never accept.
Tuesday, July 25, 2017
First Day at Mazimbu
When our daladala pulled
in to Mazimbu yesterday afternoon, our patient bench was empty, so our visit
was only to accomplish our formal first meeting to greet our co-workers at
Mazimbu and to unpack our medical supplies. But this morning, our first
official day, began with patients awaiting our arrival, sitting patiently on
our benches.
Much planning and discussion went in to our game plan before
today.
But first, let us give you an outline of what our work at
Mazimbu looks like—we work concurrently with the Mazimbu staff. The hospital is
shaped like an inverted U, with the Mazimbu reception area on one side of the U
and our reception on the opposite side of the U. Once our patients have been
registered, they enter the U and meet with our nurses, who gather their history
for the doctor. After they have met with the doctor, labs or pharmacy may be
ordered. Mazimbu lab techs will pull the blood and run the tests. The meds may
be filled by our pharmacy or, if it is not a med we brought, by the Mazimbu
pharmacy. If an EKG or an Xray or an ultrasound is needed, it is performed by
Mazimbu staff.
This year two of the Mazimbu doctors are working with Doug
as team doctors because they each can help in different ways—
Mazimbu’s
Dr. Swai is a gynecologist so his focus with the team is women who need a
surgical solution but cannot afford the cost.
Doug’s
focus is people who need a surgical solution, other than those who are within
Dr. Swai’s scope.
Mazimbu's Dr. Kivuma is a general
practitioner who can help those who are not surgical candidates.
Ok, back to our game plan. Lines are a way of life here so
Tanzanians are content to queue up and wait in line, all day if necessary, for
their turn. The tricky part is taking a well ordered single queue and
separating it into three queues—one for each of our three doctors. In this
culture, this just cannot be done. Our translators are invaluable and without
them we could not carry out our mission. But God has blessed us with three
amazing men who are so much more than translators. Kishumu and Eliah are young
Maasai men who are relatives of our very close friend, Tisho, and Epsilon is a
brother to Gamma, who has also worked with us over the years and is now married
to one of our two-time former team members. These men have helped us in the
same manner that Tisho and Gamma have in past years—not just translating, but
advising on ways we can say or do things better in this culture. With their
help we were able to quietly and diplomatically triage the line in the order
needed to allow the doctors to help all of our patients.
Monday, July 24, 2017
Renewing Relationships
Sunday Afternoon and Evening
The graceful grounds of Lutheran Junior Seminary (LJS) will
be our home for the next two weeks. This campus began as a seminary but over
the years has changed to a boarding school for middle and high school age
children with a Swahili language school that serves students from around the
world. Although the focus of the school has changed, the name remains the same.
Arriving yesterday shortly before the family-style dinner
was served, we scrambled to unload our mountain of bags so our bus driver could
leave and we quickly dropped everything, untouched, in our rooms. Dinner was a
selection of rice, boiled potatoes, baked beans, beef and carrot stew and fresh
cucumbers and tomatoes.
Although the long trip and lack of sleep was apparent on the
face of every team member, directly after dinner we met in the common room for
our first team meeting where we discussed some of the cultural differences that
are important for us to know and observe. A brief plan for the next day was
outlined, but Cindy warned to consider all plans drawn in very light pencil!
Meeting concluded, the team turned to unpacking and settling
in to our basic but clean rooms. All are furnished with a foam mattress on a
frame, a cabinet for clothing, a mat on the floor and a trash can. And a
self-contained bathroom!. The bachelor boys (Chris—because his wife is not on
this trip, Will and Zach) have individual rooms near each other in the B wing. Both
married couples are in the H wing and have rooms with a large bed and the 4
solo women are paired up in the F wing with Cindy and Pati right next door to
Ashley and Nancy.
Monday Morning
We are not yet on Doug’s early morning rounds time table, so
we took our time with breakfast (yogurt, granola, the local porridge called uji, and toast.) Our attire is our
Sunday-go-to-meeting best since our first stop is the diocese office at the
parish in Morogoro of Mjimpyia. Bishop Mameo, the bishop of the Morogoro
diocese of the church, is currently in the US for a few weeks so his assistant,
George Pendua, formally greeted the team. We were warmly welcomed and treated
to a tour of the multi-story church that, year by year, is ever nearer
completion.
Communication woes were solved this morning when our friend,
Kishumu, and his cousin, Eliah, helped us get set up with a wireless modem and
activation of the team phones. This means that we will all have access to good,
fast, internet every evening in the common room. We are all pretty stoked about
this!
Lunchtime found us at a local restaurant, the Hilux, where
we enjoyed typical Tanzanian food. Our day will finish at Mazimbu, the small
government hospital where we will be working. We will be greeting everyone at
Mazimbu and showing the new team members the layout. Once the formalities are
concluded, we will unpack our medical supplies and medicines and set up our
work spaces, including our locking pharmacy. We do not know what we will find
when we arrive but are prepared to begin our work if hopeful patients have
already begun to arrive.
Sunday, July 23, 2017
Safely Arrived in Dar es Salaam
Just a quick introduction to
your team this year--
Doug Treptow
is our surgeon and is joined by his wife, Glennis, who works as our
pharmacy tech. The Treptows live in Rogers, AR and this will be their 6th trip
to Tanzania.
Lance and Eileen Miller
are retired and live in Hot Springs Village, AR. Lance is an engineer and a car
enthusiast and works as a "fundi" or fixer. Eileen is the church
organist and directs the choir and will be helping Glennis in our pharmacy
Cindy Pennie
is our team leader and is a retired RN from Stillwater, OK. Cindy has led the
team each of our 10 years and, before that, was a member of a different medical
team twice.
Pati Murdock
handles team logistics. She manages a law firm in Rogers, AR so those skills
carry over to our work here. This is Pati's 10th year to serve.
Will Murdock
is Pati's oldest son and she is so happy to share her love of Tanzania with
Will, who is a Junior at Metropolitan State University in Denver, studying
Industrial Design. This qualifies him to be our 2nd "fundi" so he and
Lance will be putting their tools and mechanical knowledge to the test.
Nancy Bean
is a retired veterinarian from Texas, who has served on the team three times
before this year. She will be working with our patients and doing initial
interviews and triage.
Chris
Buzzelli and Ashley Jones are surgical techs who
work with Doug in Rogers, AR. This is their first trip and they are looking forward
to working with their Tanzanian counterparts as they scrub in and work with
Doug in the surgical theater.
Zach Lewis is a sophomore at OSU studying management information
systems. Zach will be assisting the team wherever help is needed.
36 hours of travel
Our travels yesterday took much
longer than we originally planned. Team members left from Dallas, Houston and
Oklahoma City and met in Washington DC for the 2 international flights--DC to
Zurich and then Zurich to Dar. The rest of the team left from (XNA) Chicago to
Newark for the flight to Zurich, which is where the team met all together for
the first time.
Connections were very tight for
the Arkansas group. We landed in Chicago with just enough time to make it to
the plane. Newark was a different story. We arrived much later than planned so
we had to make a run for it! As we arrived at the gate--4 of the 5 of us--they
were ready to close the doors. They told us we could not wait for Glennis (who had
made a pit stop) so we boarded the plane. Our lagger panted up to the gate
moments later and they did let her board--thank you United Airlines!
We enjoyed visiting in Zurich
during the short 1 hour wait to board for Dar es Salaam. Once boarded and
settled in for the long (11 hour) flight, the plane taxied to the runway...and
stopped...and stopped...and stopped. After half an hour the intercom crackled
and there was a long speech in Swiss-German. Followed by the English version
that told us mechanical problems would require a repair, we would be asked to
deplane, it should only be 3-4 hours, and please accept Swiss Air's gift of CHF
20 for food and beverage, and please stay in the terminal (with the other 280
passengers) and you can use your choice of 2 restaurants or Starbucks.
Four hours later than planned,
we were wheels up and finally landed in Dar es Salaam at 1 am. Quick--we
arrived on the 23rd instead of the 22nd--change the date on all our entry
forms! All 21 of our check bags arrived safely, with some minor scuffs or
rips and tears.
We found our beds at 4 am and are now writing this blog from the
Southern Sun, after enjoying a sumptuous brunch. It will take us most of the
day to get to Morogoro and get unpacked. Monday will begin our first day where
we renew our acquaintances with our friends and coworkers in Tanzania. We
cannot wait to begin!
Wednesday, July 19, 2017
Countdown--Just 2 Days Until We Leave
The team for this year is in our final stages of packing and last minute arrangements.
We leave the US on Friday from different airports and come together for the first time in Zurich. From there we fly to Dar es Salaam and arrive late Saturday evening. Our first night will be spent in Dar and we will travel on to our final destination, Morogoro, Sunday morning.
We will post to this blog as often as possible. That seems to be usually about every other day. Remember, we love comments! The team usually spends the evening together after dinner each night, reviewing the day and discussing the blog and we love to share your comments with the team.
Please keep us in your prayers for safe travel and for us to do the work Christ has waiting for us.
We leave the US on Friday from different airports and come together for the first time in Zurich. From there we fly to Dar es Salaam and arrive late Saturday evening. Our first night will be spent in Dar and we will travel on to our final destination, Morogoro, Sunday morning.
We will post to this blog as often as possible. That seems to be usually about every other day. Remember, we love comments! The team usually spends the evening together after dinner each night, reviewing the day and discussing the blog and we love to share your comments with the team.
Please keep us in your prayers for safe travel and for us to do the work Christ has waiting for us.
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