Katie’s Reflection
Trip of a LIFETIME: Nigeria 2009
I was blessed with the amazing opportunity to travel to Nigeria on a medical mission. On my team were two experienced nurses, Anne and Sandy, and one of my closest friends from college, Brooke. Going into this, I really did not know what to expect. I knew that electricity would be scarce, if any at all, water would be limited, we would see devastating poverty and I would come home from this experience a changed person. All of that was true.
When Brooke and I first began talking about going on this medical mission, Brooke said something that touched my soul, “All of our classmates keep talking about going into the ‘real world’, starting new jobs, paying bills, being responsible. But the more I think about going to Nigeria, that is the real world.-Nigeria is the real world. And we have this opportunity to change a life and love on people who we have never met.”
The poverty was heart-breaking. Trash lined the streets with goats digging around scrounging for food. Young children walked around barefoot with little clothes on, if any at all. Women were seen walking with water on their heads and a baby on their backs.
My experience is really hard to explain, let alone write about. I am not saying this to offend any of you, but you just won’t understand, as many of you have not been to a third world country.
The medical team was stationed in Zing, Nigeria at the United Methodist Compound. Living within the compound was Dr. Avar (the eye doctor) and Dr. Deo (the medical doctor). Also In the compound was the hospital, the eye clinic, the UM guest house (which is where we stayed).
Our first weekend in Nigeria, we had the opportunity to travel to a rural village to spend the night. Bargami is located in the bush (aka: rural Nigeria). It took us about three hours to get there, including about an hour and a half (6 miles) on this terrible road, which included lots of huge bumps, large puddles of water, and at times the vehicles felt like they were going to roll/tip over.
We were welcomed with an incr edible ceremony I have ever experienced. The entire village came to greet us; waving, singing, dancing as we pulled up. They immediately swarmed our trucks, making getting our very difficult. I have never had so many people wanting to shake my hand or touch me. Where ever we went within the village, there were always children crowded around us. I had a really hard time with all that at first, but it got easier as the weekend went on. That night we danced under the stars until the wee hours of the morning with the people from the village. It was one of the most amazing experiences I have ever experienced in my life. It was incredible to have all these kids around; dancing and holding my hands-we were united together. I will never forget the moment when I looked down and could only see white teeth-children smiling; it gives me chills just thinking about it again. This picture was taken right before we left to head back to Jalingo.
Dr. Deo is the medical doctor at the rural health program (RHP) in Zing. He did his fellowship at the RHP and came on as the staff medical doctor in April 2009. He is the sole doctor at the hospital and he does everything from admitting patients, to rounding everyday to performing all the surgeries. He is one of the most amazing people I have met. His vision for the hospital is wonderful and he is trying to focus a lot of his time and money on the maternity clinic. His goal is to educate women about the importance of accessing health care when they come in for their prenatal check-ups. Currently, there is a person in the states that is providing his salary for one year, hoping within a year the hospital with be self-sufficient, bringing in enough funds to pay Dr. Deo’s salary.
Our team was donated $1000.00 to use to sponsor patients who would die if they did not receive medical treatment. Dr. Deo approached us with two patients in dire need of medical attention, but their families could not afford it. Patient A was a seven month old baby with a possible bowel blockage. He needed surgery if there was any chance that he would survive. That night Dr. Deo performed bowel surgery on the infant and we got to be in the operating room observing. It was a really neat experience. Dr. Deo explained what he was doing and what he was finding; he even kept telling us to get closer to the table, so we could see. At first he thought it was a blocked bowel, and then he thought it was a congenital bowel defect. After he had the entire bowel out of the infants abdominal cavity, and he searched all of it for a blockage, he concluded that the bowel was twisted. As Dr. Deo squeezed the contents in the bowel, the baby had a stool. We were all really happy that nothing more serious was wrong.
- Three days post-op
Patient B was a woman who had miscarried, but she waited a few days before coming to the hospital. By the time she arrived, the tissue and fetus had begun to rot, causing her to become septic. She was very sick and needed IV antibiotics, but like the previous patient, her family could not afford the medication.
This was such a magical moment. We not only saved one life; we saved two lives.
Each of us on the team had the opportunity to go to a rural village health clinic, we went in pairs. Anne and I went to Casaw. I saw a lot of malaria, UTI’s, and back pain from farming. This was quite the experience. There were hundreds of people waiting to see us, and sadly, we did not get to see all of them. Luckily we were separated by a door to the people waiting, and we had people guarding the door, doing crowd control; it was a mad-house.
On my first day in the RHP, Dr. Deo took me to see his ‘tiniest patient’, a baby girl born at 23 weeks, weighing 1.3kg (2.8 lbs). The baby miraculously started breathing on her own and to keep her warm, they are using a lantern. This was very foreign to me. As a team we discussed putting our extra team money towards an incubator. However, as the week went on, I thought about this infant and lantern a lot. I realized that an incubator would not be a good idea for them. They (the RHP) do not have consistent electricity, and what they are using today is working for them. When this picture was taken, she was very sick; she was septic.
- Premature baby: born at 23 weeks, weighing 1.3 kg (2.8 lbs)
I had an incredible opportunity to scrub into surgery with Dr. Deo. This was such an amazing experience, and an experience that I would have never have had here in the states. I was really nervous, as I have never had this opportunity before. Dr. Deo would just tell me to calm down and breathe. He said, “You can never freak out during surgery that is not good for the patient”.
(picture above) Dr. Deo and I doing surgery. Right after this picture was taken, this conversation took place between D. Deo and me:
Katie: “Dr. Deo, I am not feeling very well”
Deo: (just looks at me) “sooooo, do you want to scrub out?”
Katie: (thinking, well either I will scrub out or you will be picking me up off the floor)…”yes”
Later that night, I found out that Dr. Deo thought I got sick because of the blood… BUT that was not the case….I was sick and was sick for 6 days after this.
After we had spent a week in Zing working with Dr. Deo at the hospital, we went to Pero, Nigeria with Dr. Avar and his team to hold a week long eye camp, where Dr. Avar would do sixty-five free eye surgeries in two days. My team’s job was to screen all of the patients. If they had a serious eye problem (cataracts, glaucoma, entropion or some other condition that we were not familiar with) we would refer them to see the Dr. If they needed reading glasses, we would refer them to John to get fitted with glasses and everyone else, we wrote prescriptions for. We saw a lot of bacterial infections, corneal scars, allergic conjunctivitis, cataracts, glaucoma and foreign bodies in the eyes. In four days, my team saw 825 patients, so 1650 individual eyes, and that was just the icing on the cake, and in two days Dr. Avar did sixty-five FREE eye surgeries.
- Dr. Avar removing a cataract in Pero. He could do a cataract surgery in 15-20 minutes
This week was really rough for me. By the end of our first day there, the surgery schedule was full. So the patients we saw Tuesday-Thursday didn’t even have the chance to have free eye surgery. So here I was telling these people that there was nothing I could do for them and they would be blind unless they had the money to travel to Zing, where the eye clinic is, and then also pay for the surgery. It just tore me apart.
Another thing I really struggled with was the translators. As a nurse, patient teaching is a huge part of our job. Just about anyone can be taught skills (staring IV, inserting catheters, etc), but is the ability to educate the patient about their condition or medication that makes a nurse a nurse. When I would tell the translator what I wanted her to translate to the patient, she would just look at me, and hand the piece of paper to the patient and send them to pay. That really frustrated me and it made me feel like I was failing as being a nurse.
Our living quarters in Pero was something to be desired. The house had hornet nests, bats, cockroaches and lizards. On our first night there, Brooke and I, well and the rest of the medical team, did not realize when we went to bed that our windows did not have screens on them. The generator (providing lights) was on and stayed on until about 0100. Around 10:30 that night, swarms of termites came flying into our room. These are not the termites we have here-these were B52 bombers/termites on steroids. They had FOUR wings and the wing span was about 1.5 inches (and I am not exaggerating). This picture is not of the termites in Nigeria, but it will give you a hint as to what we dealt with. They were everywhere in our room, on the wall, on the floor and on the outside of our mosquito net. Luckily Brooke and I were sharing a bed or else I think I might have died, cardiac arrest, no joke, it was very traumatic for me. Just writing about this gives me the eeebbbee-jeebeess.
Being in Pero has really made me miss home; however, I was in no way homesick. This is part of a journal entry that I wrote in my journal:
At first I entitled the list “Things I miss from home”; however, after some deep thought, I thought a lot on this trip, I decided to change the list to “Things I am blessed with at home”.
Things I am blessed with at home:
• Clean water
• Running water
• Familiar food
• Cheese (I LOVE cheese)
• A real shower
• Coffee, Coffee, Coffee (I am addicted to sugar-free vanilla lattés)
• Air conditioning
I am still having a really hard time wrapping my mind around what life is like here, and I am only here for three weeks; life is not easy. It makes me realize how blessed I am to be an American. However, at the same time, I feel guilty with my life back home. But then I remember that God is in control and He has a plan for each and every one of us. We are each blessed in our very own unique way. The more I thought about life and the whole meaning of life, I concluded that, in my opinion, the Nigerians are way more blessed than I am. They have and know the love of living with their entire family, they are happy with what they have, as they don’t know any different. They don’t dwell on material stuff; they are in survival mode, striving to make it through one day at a time.
It has been really hard to come back home. I am a changed person, but no one else in my family has experienced what I have. We have so much and we waste so much. I am disgusted of all the food in my refrigerator; it drives me crazy when lights are left on. I have realized that as a country, we are too materialistic and we have way too many choices. We do not need thirty choices of bread, cheese or chips, etc. Going to Nigeria made me realize how complicated the United States has become.
I am not sure I will go back to Nigeria in the future. It was very challenging for me, emotionally, physically and spiritually. However, I do know that for the rest of my life, I can and will donate at least $25 a month towards the RHP.
Nigeria is no longer just a country it has a face, many faces-beautiful faces.
Nigeria is a country that a really long ways to go. Their health crisis is something is not going to be fixed over night. Please join me in praying for Nigeria and the people of Nigeria.
If anyone would like to look at some more of my pictures, here is my Facebook link.
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2064465&id=207301688&l=2d6a9856a3
We’re home!!
Just wanted to let you know that we had a safe but long (13 hours on the airplane) trip home yesterday! Becca and I arrived in Sioux City around 2:00 a.m. this morning, and I’m guessing that the Des Moines part of the team arrived home at about the same time. We’re bushed but blessed and will get picks and details on here soon! Thank you sooo much for your prayers!
FYI
Hi Everyone! Just wanted to let you know that this may be my last post for the trip. Becca and I will be traveling around the Gwaten District tomorrow and then on Friday we travel to Jalingo to begin our journey back. We hope to hit the market in Jalingo (shopping, yea!) on Saturday. I’m preaching in a church there on Sunday, and then the first of the week we begin the travel home…it’s a looonnnggg trip! We’re to thankful for all of your prayers, and can’t wait to share our stories! Hope that all is well with you — God bless!
June 22nd
Belated Happy Father’s Day to all of you for whom that applies! We’ve been away from the internet for awhile! Becca and I have now been in Bambur almost a week. Brooke and Katie are still in Zing at the clinic and we haven’t been able to communicate (it’s a ways away). I’m sorry (to their families) but I don’t know if they have internet access or not, and of course…no cell phones for us here…though many, many Nigerians have them. Becca is doin’ a great job teaching about computers and is much loved. They’ve give her a Nigerian name…Penisum (one who cares). Very cool! After working at the school and seminary last week, we had free time this weekend and went to the local market with John Pena and Milka who helped us navigate and negotiate — very fun! I preached at a big UM church in Mutandaya yesterday — scary and wonderful all at the same time! God is so good, though and things went very well! We’re both teaching again this week and will head back to Jalingo probably Friday where we’ll hook up with Brooke and Katie and the rest of the Iowa-Nigeria team (Linda, Jim, Angela, Rachel, Anne, Sandy, Carolyn). Three members of our team were supposed to be heading home today so we’re praying that all is well with them. I’m sorry but I’m not going to be able to add pictures until later as the computers here are very slow. But we have tons of ’em so look out! They’ll be coming! Becca and I hope that all is well with you — we love you and can’t wait to see you again.
Nigeria is an amazing place….and oh, so beautiful! It’s going to be a challenge for us to get used to not being celebrities though…everywhere we go here, children run alongside and shout “Baturi! Baturi!” (white people), and they wave and smile like crazy! And they are so much fun…language isn’t a barrier when it comes to kids!
Two days in a row…
OK…first of all, for all of you English majors (like me) who noticed that I misspelled “their” (should have been “there”) in my last post, mea culpa. I noticed it after I sent it but these computers are so slow that I knew it would take a loonnnggg time to correct and I didn’t have that much time! I’m pretty amazed that I’m able to get at the computer again today, but Becca is still teaching a class here at the seminary so I have a little time — yea! Today I traveled with John Wesley (African name) and Warren and Verna Thompson from Akron to two villages to visit the people there and hear about their needs (which are huge). You cannot imagine the roads here…10 times worse than our most pot-holed roads — we got stuck three times and people from the nearby villages had to come out and help us! I have pictures…when I have more time I’ll add them. We met the nicest people who sang to us, visited with us, showed us their churches, and pitiful dispensaries, their broken water pumps, fed us and treated us like royalty. It was very humbling…We also waved to hundreds of children who would yell out “Baturi! Baturi!” (white people) as we drove by. And they love touching our skin, though some of the little ones are afraid. In the last village, the lay leader of the church gave us two chickens as a gift for our visit…and John Wesley told us it would be rude to refuse them, so they’re in the back of the vehicle. For you Jesus-people, think “the least coin”…truly blessed we are. Anyway, I don’t want to hog the computer…there are lots of people here waiting to get online. I’ll send more soon!
We’re HERE!!!!
And yup, we’ve been here since last Friday…but haven’t been near the internet. Nigeria is NOT Iowa! 🙂 But we’re all safe and happy and having the time of our lives! Saturday night we went “camping” — went to a village 5 miles from a paved road, spent the night in the church their, danced under the stars with the most amazing people!! Taught ’em the electric slide! On Saturday, we all tasted termites! And no, they don’t taste like chicken but they’re not bad! Katie and Brooke are in Zing bein’ nurses, and Becca and I arrived in Bambur this afternoon. Hopefully I’ll be able to get some pictures up here soon! Hope that you’re all well! We love you!
REALLY almost gone!
Here we are at the Atlanta airport! Lagos here we come! (Sorry for the BIG picture!)
Almost gone!!
All the piles of stuff are in the suitcases, it’s 11 hours till take-off, and we’re headed for Omaha. Can’t wait to meet up with Katie and Brooke in Atlanta! (Kathy and Becca)
K.O’s first post
Hey Friends! It’s Monday, June 8th and I haven’t left for Nigeria yet, but I’m packin’! Katie McGuire, Brooke Pottorff (Nurse Pottorff — she passed her boards — woot!), Becca Anderson and I leave on Thursday, the 11th. We’re excited as all get-out, and a little nervous too, so yeah, prayers will be welcomed! I’ve never blogged before but will do my best to keep you all in-the-know about what’s happenin’ in Nigeria for the next three weeks.