Saturday, December 8, 2012

Screening Day

Rabiby

 SCREENING DAY.....is one of my favorite days of the mission.  This is the day when kids and their families travel from far and wide to be evaluated by the Operations Smile medical team for surgery.  For some of the kids, it's their first time seeing a doctor and for others it is the first time they will be evaluated by a surgeon.  This experience affords them a free opportunity to be seen by multiple specialists including Plastic Surgeons, Pediatric Intensivists, Pediatricians, Speech Pathologists, Dentists, Social Work, and Nursing for vital signs, phlebotomy, etc.  When we arrived at the hospital at 7am, there was already a line of kids and parents waiting outside our unit. This little guy on the right was our very first patient, well behaved and waiting patiently to be seen.
I worked the "final chart review" station with two of the Recovery Room nurses, Kristin and Irene.
I'm so glad I agreed to work at this station.  We reviewed the completed charts after the kids went through and were evaluated by all of the services including the social history-how they traveled to the screening day(by bus, jeepney, boat, donkey, motorcycle, etc), where they live, family history, what they believe, if anything, caused their child's deformity.  Since this was only my second mission it gave me a much clearer picture of how the entire process works.  FASCINATING!!!!

7am-Initial line of patients waiting to be evaluated.

One of 3 plastic surgery stations.

Our little dancer. She was a total wild woman, moving and shaking all over the place like her life depended on it. :)
This day brings about a conflict of emotions for me.  The kids and families arrive with such hope.  In most cases the team will be able to bring their dreams to life by performing a successful surgery on their child.  Unfortunately, in some instances the child is either not a good candidate for surgery or is not medically stable enough to undergo surgery.  The upside for many of the kids who can not undergo surgery is that during the medical evaluation they may be directed to the proper specialist who can further access their condition and formulate a plan to help. ie-cardiologists, hematologists, etc

This little pumpkin screamed with excitement and pointed at Kristen and I as soon as she walked in the door. Blonde hair was all the rage in the Philippines. ;)

Andrea Jane is 4 going on 24. From the moment she walked through the doors she was a charming sassy little one. I'm pretty confident she may become a pop star someday now that she has a repaired palate. More on this little fireball later. ;)



Kristen and Althea, one of the happiest babies I've ever seen in my life.

Beautiful Azel Marie

A Jeepney picking up right outside the hospital

All the stickers donated through my amazingly thoughtful and generous friends via Facebook made for some incredibly happy kids!
The Student Volunteers from Bolivia along with their fearless leader Carlos brought along suitcases full of toys for the kids, clothing donations and themed costumes for each day for the medical staff to wear.  The screening day theme was "Smile Heros",we all equipped with capes and Op Smile tattoos.
Smile Heros
Rosie the Smile Riveter :)


Our "security guards" AKA Domenick and Jeffrey our male nurses from Manila.

It was interesting to see what the parents believed to be the cause of their child's deformity.  We saw everything from hereditary, unknown, karma for mothers or family members making fun of people with clefts, pregnant mothers going outside during an eclipse, riding a motorcycle during pregnancy, etc. There are multiple factors researched regarding clefts but in many cases the scientific cause is unknown by the medical community.
More cuties!




It was a great day with approx. 240 kids from all over the Philippines evaluated by our medical staff and most of them scheduled for surgery.       Hooray!!!!

Saturday, December 1, 2012

Cebu City, Here We Come!!!!

After a moment of panic as the bus doors where closing in front of our hotel in Manila when i realized I left my passport and US dollars in the hotel safe(that would have been AWFUL!!!) we were on our way to the airport to fly to our mission site in Cebu City.

I was fortunate enough to sit next to Marilyn Moonan on the plane.  Marilyn is a pediatric nurse from Boston who has been on over 20 missions and would be acting as the pre/post op charge nurse.  She has a wealth of knowledge, I was able to pick her brain about the experience and it was nice to chat with another nurse from the Northeast.  The time flew by chatting with Marilyn and in a blink of an eye we were in Cebu City being greeted by a huge welcome committee of Local Volunteers.  We came down the escalator from our gate to clapping, cheering, a huge banner and people draping beaded Cebu necklaces around our necks like Hawaiian Leis.


Well...at least it was phonetically correct, last mission my badge said Merlissa Merliss. ;)

Waiting for our bus outside the Cebu Airport on Mactan Island.

 The bus took us straight from the airport to the hospital to take a tour.  As I stared out the window on the ride over, I was in awe of the stark contrast between wealth and poverty. There were countless tin roof shacks right next to multi-million dollar malls and high rise buildings.  I didn't sense that there were any traffic laws or if there were people weren't following them. Bicycles, Jeepneys, cars, vans looked like a sea of ants crawling across the road whichever way they could, with kids running through the streets often times weaving around the cars.

One of the local doctors welcoming the international volunteers.

We were working out of a public government hospital.  It was like nothing I'd ever seen before.  On the way to the unit reserved for Op Smile, we passed by an adult ward that had at least 50 patients lines up in beds approx. 1-2 feet apart, no curtains separating them, everyone talking amongst themselves in the 80 degree heat. A far cry from the inpatient units in the US where patients/parents often complain when they have to share a room with one other patient.



The hospital was open air and the set up kind of reminded me of the high schools I used to see on TV shows set in LA or Florida when I was a kid.  This was the view looking out the back of the unit designated for Op Smile. There was tons of wreckage and several roosters crowing around the clock, they clearly didn't get the memo that they are "God's alarm clock", not "God's snooze button".  I wish they weren't such overachievers. ;)

 This was the long corridor/room that served as the pre/post op area and also where the screening day would take place.  We divided it in 4 sections, the pre-op area was in the far corner, post-op area in the long hall on the right, lunch/break area for the staff on the other side of the wall on the left and the nurse's station inside the wood walls in the center.  There would be over 100 narrow stretchers filled with little patients and their families, lining this corridor in just a few days. It was hard to imagine.




This was the OR. There would be 8 OR tables running simultaneously, with a recovery area in a hallway just outside this room. 


After the tour the buses took us to our hotel to check.  We stayed at the Radisson Blu Hotel which is owned by one of the major sponsors of our mission here in Cebu so we had the luxury of staying in the gorgeous 5 star hotel that was decorated like a Wintery Christmas Wonderland. 

Another stark contrast to the poverty we had just witnessed at the hospital and hard to wrap my brain around.  We were all grateful to have a place so refreshing to rest between our long hours ahead on the mission.  The local team treated us to a welcome party of hors d'oeuvres, cocktails and desserts from all over Asia.  I sampled every dessert and they were all divine! There was a live band and the medical directors even got up on stage and sang for us.  We soon discovered this display of live music and officials getting up on stage to sing was not out of the ordinary. ;)
This was my favorite, red velvet :)! Mmm!

Our rooms were gorgeous and I lucked out in the roommate department! I was placed with Jamie Gibson, a child life specialist from South Carolina, who is the biggest Clemson football fan I've ever met.  Everyone who knows me well knows I'm not from the south but I kinda wish I was, Jamie was like a kindred spirit. So funny, sweet, considerate and easy to live with.  Hallelujah!