Showing posts with label heal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heal. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Information Overload & Independence Day

I’ve been in Roatán for a little over a week. It’s been exhausting (mostly due to information overload) but it has been really good.



one room
Last week, I got a good taste of what the next three months will be like: in the mornings I’ll be in the public hospital in Coxen Hole at a pediatric clinic with Dra. Cerritos, a Honduran pediatrician. There, the core part of my day is spent doing triage before Dr. Cerritos sees patients. I weigh babies and kiddos, measure heights and head circumferences, take temperatures, hand out stickers and tickle tummies. After the doctor (or doctors – right now we have a doctor here doing a rotation with the clinic, which is super helpful; we can see twice as many patients every day!) sees patients, I enter the data from the visits into a database that keeps track of who we see, where they’re from, and the doctor’s diagnosis and recommendations.

this is where I weight & measure kiddos
the other room
waiting area
The hospital is so different than what I’m used to. It is unbelievably hot. People are everywhere. While doctors are seeing patients, other patients and nurses and doctors walk in and out of the room. It feels… chaotic. All of this, of course, is through the eyes of foreigner. Of course it feels different. But it does not feel unsafe. Doctors and nurses are caring for their patients, and caring for them very well, with the few resources they have. The hard part is that they have few resources.


Nursing Education
On Thursday and Friday, I sat in on a couple of classes that were given by three nurse educators who came down for Global Healing to look at how they might expand their outreach in the hospital. The classes were for nurses and covered care for diabetes patients, and care for low birth weight babies. One of the educators mentioned that she has seen nurses sit with a baby for an hour without leaving their side to monitor the baby’s health. A Honduran nurse spoke up, saying there is no way they would have to sit with one patient for an hour. Later, the question of hand washing came up – The hospital has few sinks with functioning water and I have yet to see a dispenser for antibacterial gel. The nurses recognize that they don’t always use the best hand washing techniques between every patient, sometimes they don’t make it to the sink, or there is no soap, or whatever. They fully understand the importance of washing their hands (they spend just as much time in nursing learning to wash their hands as we would in the USA—and any nursing student would tell you it’s the first thing you learn), but how can they wash their hands properly when they don’t have soap? Or antibacterial gel?

These are my initial observations. It is hard to see some of these things, and it’s important to see them. But equally (if not more) important is seeing that these professionals want to care for their patients in the best way possible, and they are trying to do so. As far as my role as a volunteer in all of this, I’m not sure what to think exactly, except that I am going to learn a lot. If anyone has any insight, I would love to hear it. All these things have been tumbling around my head all week. Luckily I’ve been able to chat about it with other volunteers, but I’d love to hear what friends and family back home think about this, or experiences they’ve had. 

So yes, it’s been exhausting. But I have been incredibly blessed to be living with an amazing, welcoming family who I have no doubt will take really good care of me while I’m here. They’ve showed me around the island, introduced me to their family, and have made me some amazing food (Doris’ baleadas are AMAZING!!). Sunday was Independence Day here, and this weekend was full of festivities, including several parades.







One week has already been eye opening… it’s going to be an interesting three months.

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Global Healing, RVPC, & HEAL



This whole business with Roatán, Honduras came to be because earlier this summer, I was accepted as the HEAL intern for the Roatán Volunteer Pediatric Clinic. The clinic is run by Global Healing, which is an organization that goes into developing parts of the world to establish programs to promote health care reform where modern medical care is often not available. What is key about Global Healing is that they aim to create sustainable programs. It’s not just about short-term interventions, but it’s about creating long-lasting relationships with the communities they work in to become self-sufficient programs. Global Healing has programs in Georgia, Armenia, Dominica, Moldova, Nepal, Haiti, Ukraine, and (ta-da!) Honduras.

Global Healing came to Honduras in 2003, opening the Roatán Volunteer Pediatric Clinic. The clinic is based out of the Public Hospital, of which there is one on the island of a population of around 65,000. With the government only able to support one permanent pediatrician, the hospital could not meet the demands of the pediatric outpatients, and often patients were turned away. So Global Healing stepped in to relieve this demand. The clinic is staffed by volunteer physicians from the US, and there are year-round rotations for pediatric resident physicians as well as a Health Education and Advocacy Liaison interns (HEAL - that’s me!). The RVPC provides perinatal care, newborn care, and inpatient pediatrics.

The HEAL intern serves as the Clinic Coordinator, locating resources (i.e. meds, specialty referrals, etc.) for patients, helping them through the logistics of utilizing these resources (i.e. locating funding for trips to the mainland for follow-up care). Interns assist in setting up the clinic before patients arrive, triage as patients and their families come into the clinic, collecting patient data, and interpreting for Global Healing physicians.

I will also have the opportunity to work with long-term patients individually, coordinating care among many health care providers and locating resources where there may not seem to be many – this is the aspect of the internship that most excites me. I am excited to get to know patients and families better to be part of creating a care plan that is best for them, and I’m hoping to get to know the community and the culture well so that I can learn how to personalize care for every person.

In an effort to help the clinic, I am now trying to gather donations of all sorts to take with me. Below is the list of things that the clinic always needs. I’ll be collecting in the Denver/Boulder/Colorado Springs area until I leave – please contact me or leave a message below if you’re interested in donating

25 days and counting…!




Non-prescription Medications & Supplies
  • Infant and children's acetaminophen
  • Infant and children's liquid cold
  • medication (e.g., pseudoephedrine)
  • Ibuprofen (liquid or infant drops)
  • Benadryl (liquid preferred)
  • Hydrocortisone ointment or cream
  • Topical antibiotic ointment
  • Selsun Blue shampoo
  • Anti histamine ointment or cream
  • (anti-itch cream)
  • Eucerin or other moisturizing creams
  • A&D, Desitin, or other diaper creams
  • Vaseline petroleum jelly
  • Cetaphil lotion
  • Oral calcium supplements
  • Children’s vitamins
  • Debrox ear drops
  • Clotrimazole (Lotrimin) ointment
  • Saline bullets
  • Individual alcohol rubs
  • 3cc & 5cc syringes
  • Nizoral shampoo
  • Nix (lice treatment)
  • Silver Nitrate applicators
  • Urinalysis dip-sticks
  • Glucometer / glucometer strips
  • Thermometers (no mercury)
  • Ear thermometer w/covers
  • Infant nasal suction bulbs
  • Pulmo-Aide or other nebulizers

General Donations
  • Infant formula
  • Preemie, infant, and baby pampers
  • Combs
  • Shampoo, Conditioner, & soaps
  • Toothbrushes & toothpaste
  • Sandals, shoes, flip flops
  • Clothes
  • Socks
  • Children’s stickers
  • Small Toys and Stuffed Animals
  • Writing Utensils
  • Spanish & English kids’ books
  • Notebooks
  • Child backpacks
  • Crayons and coloring books
  • Hand Towels
  • Kleenex, Paper Towels
  • Nail Clippers
  • Sports Equipment: Soccer Balls
  • Pumps for balls
  • Flashlights (ones that do not need batteries)

Clinic Supplies
  • Antibacterial hand gels
  • Paper towels
  • 409 disinfectant sprays
  • Plastic Ziploc bags
  •     (little ones most needed)
  • Print cartridges (HP cartridges 21 and 22 for HP Deskjet D1460 printer)
  • Printer paper

Prescription Medications
  • Ceftriaxone for injection
  • Any oral antibiotics (liquid preferred)
  • Amoxicillin
  • Augmentin
  • Azithromycin
  • Clarithromycin
  • Erythromycin
  • Cefazolin
  • Other cephalosporins
  • Penicillin
  • Dicloxacillin
  • Ciprofloxacin
  • Metronidazole
  • Topical Bacitracin
  • Topical Neosporin
  • Nystatin ointment
  • Cortisporin otic suspension
  • Erythromycin ophthalmic ointment
  • Albuterol/salbutamol liquid for nebulization
  • Albuterol etered dose inhalers (MDIs)
  • Permethrinor Lindane (for scabies)
  • Topical Sterids
  • Oral steroids
  • Prednisolone
  • Prednisone
  • Dexamethasone
  • Dexamethasone for injection
  • Inhaled steroid MDIs
  • MDI spacers