Gentle and sweet Godly Man, such a pleasure to have him around at the clinic. He smile radiates the love of God. |
“Let me see, is that
everything?” Anita picks up her water bottle and prepares to leave the clinic.
I glance at the people sitting in the hospital room. Let me see, Batel
shouldn’t be too hard to get along with. He is basically at the maintenance stage of things right now.
Changing his bandages and making sure he is getting his medication seems
manageable. Even carrying a bit of food down for him wouldn’t bother me. But
then, I’m not sure about the other man in the bed by the door.
They call him
Denis. Nobody mentioned that his other name is Menace. But he is confusing for
sure. I sort of picture that after a person has been sick for a long time, that
they would have these thoughts of how nice it would be to have a prescription for
some medicine that could help them get better. Apparently Denis hadn’t been
picturing things like that before he came to the clinic on Monday. I walked
into the hospital room as Anita was trying to give him some medication and
pedialyte through a syringe. His lips were tightly pursed and his cheeks were a
bit bulging. But not for long. Even with
friends massaging his throat or pinching his nose to help the swallowing
process, he didn’t choose to swallow. You guessed it. He spewed a long stream
of those contents straight into Miss Anita’s scrub top. And I doubt that was
exactly the good-bye she had been dreaming of from her patients in the hospital
room right then.
Rhoda trying to squeeze some meds through his clenched teeth, he would hold it in his mouth for minutes and then suddenly spit it all out. |
While Jon stood
at the head of the bed praying, I continued trying to squeeze meds between the
tightly closed lips, as I said, “Swallow it, swallow it.”
After a very long
time, some meds were swallowed. I asked Denis, “Do you want some rice?” Since
Denis is not likely to feel compelled to talk, I took his nodding of the head
as a very exciting event. He actually communicated with me. A lot of the time
he lays on the bed, staring unseeingly into the distance.
I asked Jon to
please go home for some rice for him. Because, well, if he could swallow rice,
that would be great. I wasn’t sure that he had eaten anything all day.
Meanwhile I tried to finish giving him the remaining liquid in the syringe.
It was great when
Jon came with the steaming plate of food for him. What wasn’t really great was
when he immediately spit all the food on the shirt he was wearing or refused to
open his mouth for it, after we had gone to all the work of getting some for
him.
We shook our
heads, gave the plate of food to his friends and decided to call our night at the
clinic finished. Was this man in his right mind? Had he gotten so sick at one
point in his life that his brain was not able to connect things? Or, Was there a
spiritual battle going on?
We started the
next day with some of the same questions stuffed in our minds. I asked Fre. Noaz to help me hold the man while we squirted the crushed pills slowly into
his mouth again. Fatigued after minutes of coaxing and reasoning, we left the
room, with wet gauze's in the trash can to finish the story of how it went this
round.
As I walked into
the room later in the day, to give Batel a new bandage, I was shocked to see
Denis sitting there with bread and coconut candy, munching away happily. “Is it
good?” I asked. I didn’t ask a million other questions that my mind wanted to
throw at him….
Here is our friend Denis sitting outside getting some fresh air!!!!!! |
His temperature is fine, he seems mostly
stabilized, and we planned to discontinue the IV permanently, along with stressing
the fact that he needs to drink by mouth now. Of course, he needs to eat,
too. So, since he doesn't want to do that, when he was SO close to being good, I guess we will need to decide if he is allowed to go home or not. Possibly it would be just as good for his family to take up the battle, I don't know at all... I hope you are happy to meet Denis
from a distance. I think it is cleaner that way. Grin.
I just got a picture of the pregnant lady with the pre- eclampsia in the back of the ambulance when Steve left to take her to Laogone. Notice the IV hanging from the ceiling? |
Then we had
another lady joining Denis and Batel in the clinic one night. I will give you a
brief run-down on her. She is pregnant, and pre-eclamptic, with approximately
two months left until her due date. She was having pain, and didn’t take her
Methyldopa one day. She ended up in the hospital bed here overnight, with a
very endangered baby included. The baby lived through the night, thanks to God. Doctor
Michael helped me transcribe the transfer paper for the hospital in town, where
she could be closely monitored in the dangerous situation she finds herself in.
I don’t know what we would have done if he hadn’t jumped in and handled the
stress with these cases that showed up in Anita’s absence.
Another Grandma
came one day and spent the night in our hospital room, on IV.
Another young lady is currently sleeping in our
hospital room, too. She seems to be fighting shigellosis. So, yes, our cleaning ladies are busy washing sheets, we are busy watching IV’s and the people who they are connected to. We are so glad you are busy doing the praying, which we feel gets so interrupted so often in our little compound here. God bless you!
Another young lady is currently sleeping in our
hospital room, too. She seems to be fighting shigellosis. So, yes, our cleaning ladies are busy washing sheets, we are busy watching IV’s and the people who they are connected to. We are so glad you are busy doing the praying, which we feel gets so interrupted so often in our little compound here. God bless you!
The "grandma" right after she came in on a stretcher. |
1 comment:
Wow... lots going on :)
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