Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Dia de Huelga y Dia a descansar

today we woke up and had the most amazing breakfast - edwin el dueno del hotel tiene abejas!! and he makes his own honey (miel) que es TAN rico!!!

we spent the rest of the morning sorting medications and having impromptu infectious disease and derm lectures cuales eran tan buenos! Gracias a los doctores quien estan aqui!

Despues de esto, we set out to explore the town and find the pequenito restaurante que recomendieron nuestro host.

when we arrived at the restaurant 14 pisco sours and a table for 14 plus baby had been set up for us!! all thanks to our wonderful host Edwin who in his wonderfulness and forsight called ahead to let them know we were coming! wow!

so.... depues de un almuerzo maravillosa, incluyendo tantos platos con quinua y muchos opciones para los 4 vegetarionos en nuestro grupo! we wondered around the town and bought some granadilla! mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm delicioso!!

we then proceeded to take a "hike" which was a walk around the town and gettting lost and one of us spraining an ankle... and eventually making it back to our, as rachel says, our little piece of heaven!

now - todos sentidos arededor del la sala del hotel chequeando email y probando los frutas nuevos que compramos!

manana, empezamos a trabajar en la clinica lamay!

Monday, June 29, 2009

Lamay Clinic Hoy

Fuimos a la clinica hoy y fueron tan diferente que pensabamos!

habia cuartos de todos tipos, an OR, a gyn room, 2 internal medicine rooms, pediatrics, dental, rayos equis, opthomologia, inpatient rooms! woah.... pero todavia necesitan un microscopio y un echografia.... ahhhh! the lady told us, quote - the microscope works de vez en cuando! so much for having a working microscope!

still no sleep since sat night.... 7 hours sleep + 41 hours awake + elevation of 10,000 feet = tan loopy!

pero beuno, tal vez manana vamos a tener un paro (huelga) - there's gonna be a strike, where the entire countries transportation workers are striking tomorrow, which means we will probably not be going to clinic which means, tal vez un dia mas para descansar!!

and to sort pills into baggies!

everyone on this trip is totally awesome - and everyone who has been helping us, lo mismo, teniamos tanto suerte! ooo tal ez es algo otro :)

nos vemos...

Dia Numero UNO en Peru :)

Woah - ESOTY EN PERU!!!!

30 hours sin dormido pero estoy en peru!!! ... no puedo describirlo aqui es TAN hermosa! llegamos en lima a noche a las 11 de la noche, y pasabamos el noche alli, despues de unos luchas con customs... pero todo salio bien! no tuvimos mucho dormido, pero, bueno, por lo menos estamos aqui!

we arrived in cuzco at 6:45 and took 3 vans with luggage piled HIGH on top and with all of us loaded inside. we drove for over an hour through the city, over a mountain up to 11,000 feet and back down to 9,000 to arrive in the village of urabamba where we are staying in the most amazing hotel i have ever seen in south america...

We will start to bring supplies over this evening and were planning to start running clinic tomorrow, but because of a country wide strike, we will be unable to go ANYwhere tomorrow, so will plan to start on Thursday :) yay!

currently can't find my camera cord, but have un mil de fotos para mostrar, ojala puedo encontralo y cargar los fotos!! :)

ciao bellos!

Sunday, June 7, 2009

visitas domicilarios

This will be my last post talking about the DR - all f the following (most recent ones) will be about Peru. (I was in the DR May 2009, and Peru, July 2009).

Entonces, visitas domiciliarios - one of the amazing things about the HIV program at Cabral y Baez is the home visits that they do. Aside from the handful of incredible and devoted physicians who treat the HIV patients there, the social worker who runs the HIV program visits the patients in their homes. Assessing the home environments is so important, but more than anything it just reinforced the extreme poverty that many of the patients lived in.

The picture to the right is a photo of one of the living rooms of a patient we visited on the last day of home visits. No habia un bano a dentro, no habia una neverra y todo la gente en esta barrio se limpiaron sus comida y ropa en el rio which ran along beside the one road that all of their houses lined the opposite side.

Other houses we visited were one room seperated by a curtain with one bed to sleep 5 people and a tv on one side of the curtain and a stove and tiny table on the other side of the curtain. The bathroom a small ceramic toilet with no lid surrounded by only three walls with a shower head on one of the walls. Fungus growing underneath. Con los pacientes que tuvieron SIDA, fue tan peligroso a tener condiciones tan sucios en respecto a sus systemas tan supressadas....

It was sad, and I felt especially during these visits so lucky to have what i have and so helpless to do anythign about their conditions. Pero una cosa beuna fue que one week after leaving the DR we found out that the governement had decided to give ten more bags of food per month to the program to hand out to the patients. So.. one step at a time I guess.

We are still working on putting up a website, finding funding and other ways to help with this little piece of amazing that struggles along in the bigger broken system of health in the DR :(...

Friday, June 5, 2009

argh

another tradgedy on my the one day of ob/gyn....

of the 15 patients who filled the sheet-less beds of the all but open air maternity ward, at least half of the girls were under 20

this one in particular was a hatian girl, probably about 16 years old, if i had to guess. the resident was using her as a teaching example - she was evidently in Lots of pain...

the students and interns gatehred around the bed as the resident pointed to the girls vagina. blood clots were coming out from around the foley that had been placed earlier...

taking the end that was sticking out, the resident says to no one in particular "this is a good example of a foley put in incrrectly" he then prcoeeds to yank the foley out... without disenflating the balloon - the young girl about to give birth yells out in pain as the foley with the inflated balloon comes out through the tiny opening of the urethra bringing with it even more blood...

the only thing i can think of is how this 16 year old is going to be incontinent for the rest of her life....

it made me shudder to think about it, and as i described the scene to the senior resident I am working with on night float today, i realized just how terrible it had been, the ful impact of the incident didn't really hit me until i retold the story 2 weeks later... here in the comfort of our rich, clean american hospital, with private rooms, plentiful nurses and salaries that are paid on time every month without fail...

i can understand how there is such a divide between the medical care given in a public hospital in santiago, puedo ver porque... pero en el otro lado, no lo tiene que ser como asi no? realmente, no estoy tan segura