Showing posts with label Sierra Leone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sierra Leone. Show all posts

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Africa Mercy - Return to Ship, Ebola Status: One Nurse's Journey

Hi! Some of you have been reading about my friend Marilyn's journey on the Africa Mercy. After a three-month vacation back home, she returned to the ship in August, only to face complications from the Ebola outbreak. As I am behind in my blogging schedule (still moving into my new home), I will post these back to back (as they came to me). Sharon

(This is a running email post written by a volunteer nurse serving on the Africa Mercy, a hospital ship that travels the African coast).


August 07, 2014

Hello again,

After three months of wonderful visits to family and a few friends, I returned to the Africa Mercy yesterday. We are currently docked in Tenerife, one of the Canary Islands. The ship undergoes maintenance and repairs between each field service, and shipyard was in the Canaries this year. After one last repair and some loading of supplies, we plan to sail to Benin around the middle of August. For those of you who are as ignorant of African geography as I am, Benin is a little country located right next to Nigeria, on the underside of the big bulge that constitutes West Africa. Of interest, it is also located about 500 miles away from Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, the epicenters of Ebola.

I'm sure many of you are following the Ebola outbreak with some interest and concern. It certainly looks scary! That it was spreading didn't surprise me--those countries are so crowded, with poor sanitation, less awareness of infection control measures, and inadequate protective equipment available to health care workers.That a couple of American health workers were infected really caught my attention because I KNOW that they took proper precautions. If they caught it, then...

Some of you may wonder why we're not responding to the crisis by sailing to the epicenter to help in the fight against Ebola. The fact is, we are a surgery unit, not a general hospital, and we are not designed, equipped, or staffed to deal with infectious diseases, or any other health problem, except certain types of surgery.

Some of you have expressed concern for the mission and people of Mercy Ships in the face of Ebola. Mercy Ships recently issued a public announcement saying, in effect,"we're aware, we're watching, everything's cool." Of course, they spent more words than that, but you get the gist. (see attachment if you're interested) Department managers get more of the inside story, and in conversation with one of them today, I learned a few details of what "we're watching" means. It sounds like Mercy Ships has developed detailed plans, with specific trigger points identified and response actions prepared. Of course, I don't know what the trigger points are, but I do know that those in charge are proceeding with all due diligence.

It is a comfort to me to realize that Mercy Ships is an old hand at dealing with in-country crises of various sorts. When we were in Guinea, there was a lot of unrest, and even violence, in the city where we were located. Mercy Ships had detailed plans then, too, of what our response would be if this, or if that, or if the other. What if we had to leave and we had patients on board who couldn't be discharged? Mercy Ships had a plan and had already made all the necessary arrangements, so they could have responded almost instantly if they had needed to. I'm sure that that kind of planning is taking place in the current situation, too.

Mercy Ships has a crew of volunteers from many nations, including quite a few from Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Liberia. These folks are obviously much more directly impacted by the Ebola crisis than those of us from "safe" countries. They have family and friends who are in harm's way. Some of them may need to go home, but if they do, they can't return to the ship until they've been in quarantine on shore and free of fever for 21 days. (In general, Mercy Ships has a ban on anyone who has traveled through those countries any time recently.) It must be very hard for our African crew to watch this plague envelope their countries and be unable to help.

For the moment, anyway, we are proceeding on schedule to Benin. The plan is still to have the major screening day on September 9. Between now and then, there is a lot of preparation work to be done. Cleaning the hospital after shipyard repairs is underway now, but most restocking and moving stuff will need to wait until we land in Benin. You never know when you'll hit rough seas while sailing, and everything needs to be tied down tight until we arrive.

For now, I am working in the dining room (no eye surgeries happening, of course, so hospital personnel get reassigned to a temporary job for the duration). Each day brings more volunteers back to the ship--our population is growing from a skeleton staff of about 100 during shipyard to probably 300 before sail, and another increase to about 400-450 between the time we land in Benin and the time of the big screening day. Lots of hellos and goodbyes in this time of transition.

So, goodbye for now. I'll keep you updated if there are significant changes in plans, or if something interesting happens.

Marilyn


(Attached Notice: Africa Mercy Public Announcement)

05 August 2014 UPDATE

As its hospital ship, the Africa Mercy, prepares to leave for its ten-month mission to perform life-changing surgeries and train local healthcare professionals in Benin, West Africa, Mercy Ships continues to be acutely aware of the Ebola situation in the region. The organization is taking appropriate steps to protect its volunteers and staff. In April, Mercy Ships redirected its upcoming mission from Guinea to Benin out of caution for the safety of its crew. Benin has no reported cases of Ebola.

The Africa Mercy is the world's largest civilian hospital ship, designed to operate as a surgical specialty hospital. It is not configured to provide the type of treatment required by Ebola patients. In addition to having changed its itinerary, Mercy Ships has also implemented strict travel restrictions to the affected areas and will continue to monitor the situation closely, making programmatic adjustments as needed.

Founder Don Stephens commented, “The well-being of our patients and dedicated crew is our greatest priority. It is fundamental to our continued service to the forgotten poor in Africa. Our prayers go out for the countries impacted by Ebola. These are places and people we know well because we have served them in multiple visits over more than two decades.”


[Click here to learn more about the nurses and doctors on board the Africa Mercy.]





Sharon M. Himsl

Writer/Author. Blogging since 2011. 
Published with Evernight Teen: 
~~The Shells of Mersing

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Africa Mercy - War and Worship: One Nurse's Journey

More from Marilyn in Africa. She tells the story of Ibrihim, an Africa Mercy crewman she has come to know. The brutality that so many children like him suffered in the 1990s during Sierra Leone's Civil War is chilling.........Sharon

(This is a running post about a nurse's experience on a hospital ship, the Africa Mercy)


10 November 2012
War and Worship
Greetings, my friends. I have two thoughts to share, and perhaps they are related. I heard a bit of the life story of one young man from Sierra Leone who is now part of the African Mercy crew. As you may remember, Sierra Leone had a terrible civil war in the 1990's. The rebel forces were murderous and cruel, and many terrible things happened.

They would invade villages to murder the men and boys. They would chop off children's hands and feet, leaving them maimed and
crippled. They would kidnap young boys and force them to carry
guns and do unspeakable atrocities to their own families, hardening them to a life of violence as members of the rebel forces. 

Last year, one of our day crew had been machine-gunned along with all the rest of the men of his village--he alone survived. The year before, when I was in Sierra Leone, I saw many of the young people who had had limbs chopped off when they were babies or children. The city had gangs of youth who lived a life of crime, the only "job skil" they had learned from their conscription into the rebel army. The wounds of war were still very much in evidence.  Ibrihim, the young man I mentioned, was thirteen when the  rebel forces invaded the school he attended. They shot the teacher and kidnapped the boys for their army. Most of the boys had to carry guns and kill people, but Ibrihim was big for his age, and strong.

The leader of the army unit had a young girl who was his prize  possession. She was treated like a princess, which meant, among      other things, that her feet were not allowed to touch the ground. Ibrihim was assigned the duty of carrying her everywhere she went. One day, about eight months after his capture, he heard a voice telling him to run, and run he did. He ran all day and into the night. He traveled for several days, until finally he found some people who believed him (he was still wearing his school uniform, the only clothes he had). They helped him to get home, back to his parents. But in telling the story, Ibrihim doesn't sound bitter.

 Instead, he mentions how thankful he is that he did not have to  carry a gun and kill people. My second thought comes from attending the church service on the ward this morning, and from other opportunities I've had to worship with Africans, both in West Africa and in Congo. They are exuberant! You might mistake it for a football rally--but the focus is on praising God and giving thanks.  It seems like no matter how hard their circumstances or what they have suffered, they enter wholeheartedly into worshiping God. Their attitude of gratitude is one of their great cultural strengths, it seems to me.
I'm sure you've heard African worship music.  If not, you have   missed something rich.  In general, the only instrumentation is     drums.  The complicated rhythms give pulse and energy to the     singing--they can really stir the blood. Generally someone will      lead off with a song, and the people answer by singing a responsive
phrase. The phrases will repeat, back and forth between the leader and the people, reminding me of the structure of some of  the Psalms, with their responsive chants. The leader will gradually evolve to new phrases, and the song continues. At some point, someone else will take the lead, singing what they want to sing.

 The melody also changes from time to time--it feels like something organic, one thing leading to another, but it is all expressing praise and thanksgiving to God. There aren't any songbooks, and no designated succession of leaders. It just seems to happen spontaneously, everybody participating.

So, which comes first, the chicken or the egg?  Does the pervasive attitude of gratitude give the worship singing its energy, or does their style of worship fuel their hearts with thanksgiving that spills over into the rest of their lives? Who cares? It works! It's beautiful!  

Blessings to you all,
Marilyn

Click here to learn more about the nurses and doctors on board the Africa Mercy.


 

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You could call me an eternal optimist, but I'm really just a dreamer. l believe in dream fulfillment, because 'sometimes' dreams come true. This is a blog about my journey as a writer and things that inspire and motivate me.