Tuesday, January 12, 2010

We're SAFE!!!!

Dearest friends and family,

I am safe!! Please keep Haiti in your prayers as we just suffered a devastating 7.3 on the Richter scale earthquake this afternoon. The focus of the quake was just outside of the capital, Port Au Prince, demolishing parts of that large city. The main hospital for the country was leveled. Many government buildings collapsed, and the airport is currently closed. Thousands of casualties are suspected. I live on an island off the mainland, and thus far, we seem to faring well. The missionaries here are all okay. I sewed up some minor wounds, and we've heard reports of some structural damage to buildings. Our cell phones are out of service, but otherwise, most things are okay. We are still feeling the aftershocks. My fridge is on wheels and moved 6 inches away from the wall during the big quake. 

It's dangerous to cross the sea at night, so tomorrow morning we, the LaGonave missionaries, will see where we can help. Please pray with us that God will open the way before us in Port. Please join me in praying that the Lord will open a way for me to use my medical training. It's so hard to be so close to tragedy and suffering and yet still too far away to help.

Thank you! While I wrote this note, I've heard a voodoo parade pass by. I've also heard a nearby church singing hymns. Please keep us in your prayers!!

~Diane

Monday, January 11, 2010

The Belated Christmas Post

Hi, friends!

This is the link to the long awaited Christmas-y post! It almost made it up here in time for the epiphany! :o)


Happy reading!

Friday, January 8, 2010

Answers to Unprayed Prayers

Merry belated Christmas and Happy 2010!!! I hope that you had a wonderful holiday season and enjoying a great start to the new year! I had a wonderful, whirlwind 2 weeks in the States, savoring time with my wonderful boyfriend, spending Christmas with his sweet family, crashing the ER for a brief visit and dropping off (really really strong and good) Haitian coffee and wishing that we all had more time to visit, enjoying time in colonial Williamsburg with my encouraging parents and aunt and uncle and cousin (and fellowshipping in the car on the 8 hour trip it took to get there :o), and being a part of my gorgeous best friend's beautiful, joyous wedding. Whew, what a great and speedy trip!


I returned to my Haitian home this week and was so blessed as God answered a desire of mine that I hadn't even started to pray for yet! I have been compiling a "wish list" for the hospital here. At the top of the list are necessities that I feel are urgently needed, like lab tests for basic serum electrolytes and liver function tests and a working x-ray machine. The other items are more dreamy... things that would help to elevate my hospital to first world standards. I dream big. :o) 


On the ultimate wish list is a physical therapist. That request seemed so far away from fruition that I hadn't even started to pray for it yet. And I think that the Lord may already have the answer on the way! Wow! God is so ... amazing! And nice!! (and indescribable-- it makes even gregarious me speechless!!) 


When I got back to the island on Wednesday, I got to meet a wonderful short-term team, who were finishing up their stay. One of the ladies is a physical therapist from Canada who's seriously considering serving in Haiti for 6-12 months to train Haitian medical personnel to work as a PT!!! She rode back on the boat with me to discuss the possibilities and realities of serving here, and the whole time my heart was singing to think that God might be answering a prayer that I hadn't yet prayed!!!! 


Wow! It's good to be back.

Saturday, December 19, 2009

The Stories, Continued

Curious about the conclusion of some of my adventures? I realized today that I've been telling stories and not always giving follow up, so here are come continuing stories mentioned in previous posts. Check 'em out at:


http://chariteservant.blogspot.com/2009/12/continuing-story.html


Stay tuned... Christmas post is coming soon! As we enter the season of celebrating Jesus' birth, I have been thinking about how He is Emmanuel, God with us, and what that looks like here, where life is so fragile. 

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Choir Practice in the Hospital Hallway

Singing in the hospital?!? Yup, that was my day! Read more about it and the lessons the Lord taught me today at...
http://chariteservant.blogspot.com/2009/12/hospital-sing-long.html


May your days be merry and bright and full of singing!!!

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

A Day in the Life of Mis Diane

Curious about my daily life? I felt like today gives one a good idea of a typical medical person's day here in Haiti. They call me Mis Diane here, which means Nurse Diane, with the understanding that I function like a nurse practicioner. I have a really good imagination, but I don't think that even I could have imagined that my life would look quite like this... It's full of love and loss and hope and heartache.

8am-- Arrive at the hospital for an awesome time of staff devotions with our 83 year old pastor. Thankfully, I can understand every word he says because he talks so slowly. He's an incredible, godly man!

8:15-- Find out that one of my babies died. She was my precious little patient. She was 8 months old and so malnourished that she didn't have the strength to smile or even cry. She seems to have been neglected by her mother, who I only saw once during her 6 day hospital stay. Her AIDS test was negative, but I'm still suspicious... She was so malnourished that her skin was breaking down and allowing horrible staph infections on her arms and legs. We pumped her full of antibiotics and vitamins and milk every 2 hours, and she seemed to be doing so much better!! And she was, until early this morning when she spiked a fever and didn't pull through.

8:30-- Devotions end and clinic work starts. The clinic is like a combo ER/primary care office. If you're sick or pregnant, you sign in early in morning, and then get seen in order of arrival/level of urgency. If you're sick enough, you get admitted to the hospital from the clinic. If you need to be rechecked, a follow up date is provided. Usually pregnant women will show up for one prenatal visit before returning to give birth. What a different world here!

Noon-- Enjoy lunch with the other missionaries. Matthew's brother and his wife are visiting from my hometown, and it was fun to have a meal with all of them.

2:00-- Take Matthew's family on a tour of the hospital. Kelley is 6 months pregnant, so we tested out the ultrasound equipment on her and did an impromptu ultrasound! It was so sweet to see their son's little face!

3:00-- Go to the orphanage. Filled to the brim with 53 children ages 4-12, it is a place of stories of past heartbreak and present nourishment. Some of them look incredibly different, in a healthy, happy way, from the sad, starving little ones I saw in March when I was here for a week. I'm so thankful they can be there! And I'm so thankful that I can spend time with them! I had a group of 8 little girls who enjoyed braiding my hair and begged me to come see them again. I can't wait to go back!

4:15-- Getting ready to have the church's youth group come over. At prayer group on last weekend, they asked if they could come over to pray with us before we left to go to the States for Christmas. Justine and I were delighted to accept! How sweet! While I was getting ready for them to come, I got a call from Joy that one of our missionaries had been hit by a motorcycle! Dr. Emmett is a wonderful retired missionary doctor who comes to Haiti every year for a month or two to give some of the Haitian doctors a break. He's 77, and while walking back from the hospital this afternoon, he was struck by someone driving a motorcycle with brakes that don't work!! He doesn't remember the accident, but somehow he face-planted on the gravel road. The Haitian docs spent 3 hours sewing his face up, and we extracted a rock from one of the cuts on his chin. I ran errands for them and keep his wife updated on their progress.

8:00-- Go home for dinner. We finally finished up at the hospital and I managed to get home for dinner.

9:00-- Start neuro checks on Dr. Emmett. Without a CT scanner here, I have no way to know for sure that he doesn't have a bleed inside his brain. Even if we could do one here, he's still at risk for bleeding for the next 72 hours. So, tonight, every 4 hours, I'm going over to check and be sure that he's okay. Please keep him in your prayers!

Whew! Such is my life! I'm so thankful that God promises to order our steps, cuz my day sure is full of steps!!

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Medical Website!!

I finally did it! I started my medical blog!

For a little more medical detail on today's patients, please read:
http://misdianediagnoses.blogspot.com/

I hope that you're healthy today and don't need to answer the question, "Sa ou genyen?"