Saturday, February 21, 2009

The Nurses: Anticipating the Need

The patient, a hard looking man with arms covered in tattoos who arrived in the operating room a couple of hours earlier accompanied by two well-armed guards, moans and rolls slowly toward the edge of the gurney. "Careful. We don't want you on the floor. You're too big to pick up." says Helen, a WSF recovery nurse. She attaches the pulse oximeter to her patient's left arm (it's a small but indispensable piece of equipment which reads the patient's oxygen saturation and pulse). Languid and weak from the anesthetic, he looks up at her and asks for something. It's difficult to hear what he is saying. "Kleenex? Do you need a Kleenex? A hanky?" asks Helen. "Paper," he says. She turns abruptly around and darts over to the supply basket. In no time she is back by his side gently placing the tissue in her patient's hand. Anticipating her patient's every need, calm and always prepared with a joke or a soothing word, Helen defines
"bedside manner."

A veteran of nine WSF missions Helen knows the drill. "I was only going to go on one mission. I love 'em! I love 'em! I'm hooked." It's a good thing too. On one of the India missions, Helen worked six recovery rooms by herself armed with nothing but a pulse oximeter and her charming wit. There is no doubt that she is in her element. It's as if she was plugged into some limitless energy source. And yet, regardless of the level of stress in the room she remains calm, sociable and jovial.

The WSF nurses are more than just the glue that holds everything together. They bear the mantle of responsibility for so many of the needed services on this mission. Whether in tending to the patients in PACU (Post Anesthesia Care Unit) or making sure everything is in place and running smoothly in the operating room they are dedicated and unflagging in their efforts to, as one nurse put it, "do some good and help these people!"

Helen puts an arm around her patient and props him up. Still too weak to crack a smile he gazes into her eyes with tacit trust. This image would be incongruous with any other setting, but Helen, with her sincere smile and easy manner, makes it look like business as usual.

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How to Use this Blog

Dear Students,

Please accept my “virtual invitation” to join me on this profound mission, this exciting adventure!

Blog posts will include a chronicle of daily events, interviews with patients and volunteers, and photographs.

Some brief advice on reading blog posts.
1. Go to the top of the page to find the most recent post.
2. Read the date at the top of the latest entry.
3. Read the entries from the bottom up for each date. Each entry posted on that date will be time stamped. This will help you read the posts in order (this may be relevant if we are following a particular story of a patient or event).
4. To find a list of all blog posts, go to the bottom right hand side of the blog. The entries are listed by date and title.

Sincerely,

Mr. Bucs

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

The Mission

On February 13, 2009 I will be traveling to Addis Adaba, Ethiopia with the World Surgical Foundation as a volunteer. I will be assisting the videographer, collecting and recording daily surgical data, maintaining the Foundation’s daily blog, and acting as a liaison for the press. For two weeks the volunteer doctors and nurses of WSF will be providing much needed surgical procedures to people who do not have adequate access to health care.

Addis Ababa: "The Capital of Africa"

Addis Ababa is the largest city in Ethiopia (about 3,000,000 people). Ethiopia has the unique distinction of being considered the origin of modern humans due to several very important hominid fossils which were discovered there, the most famous of which is the Australopithecine “Lucy.” Furthermore, a recent study suggests that Addis Ababa is the exact location of the origin of modern humans. After analyzing the DNA of 985 people around the world, geneticists and other scientists claim that they have found a pattern which shows that homo sapiens left Addis Ababa 100,000 years ago and migrated throughout the world. The DNA evidence indicates that genetic diversity declines steadily the farther one's ancestors traveled from Addis Ababa, which suggests that all homo sapiens throughout the world are descendents of small populations of individuals who branched off from a larger group of individuals in Ethiopia.