It is interesting to think of my weeks here broken down in numbers like this: journal entry #1,#2, etc. It makes my time here seem all that much shorter. Lately the days have become so busy that I hardly have any time to think! For some reason clinic hours have been really long, and I usually end up staying at the hospital until at least 1:30 every day. I think perhaps this team of doctors is slightly more methodical.
This week has been sweltering hot and the clinic remains to be one of the only offices in the hospital without air conditioning. It is a relief to step out into the relative cool of the hallway. I just looked up the weather on Yahoo and it told me that it was currently 86 degrees Fahrenheit in Roatan... yeah right! It's at least 95 degrees in the shade.
We've referred a lot of patients to the emergency room and surgery this week. One little girl had a foreign object so firmly lodged in her nose that one of the doctors caused some accidental trauma trying to remove it. A baby went to the ER for a serious case of croup and different respiratory problems. Three patients were referred to Dr. Sanchez for surgery: one for a herniated groin, one for frenum of the tongue, and another for a one centimeter ball growth on the penis. We also sent a little boy to La Ceiba to get an echo.
This week Esteban's father, Dr.Gershanik, and his Nurse Practitioner, Yakelis Anzola have been lecturing the nurses and Social Service doctors on neonatal resuscitation. I think it's quite interesting to them that babies who would still be in incubators back in the states are allowed to go home here. A few days ago we had an premature infant that weighed just 1.7 kg come into the clinic for a check-up. The baby was so tiny, but fully able to breastfeed! A less successful story is that of a preemie currently in the emergency room. It was 2 pounds at birth but had dropped down to 1 and was admitted, severely malnourished and dehydrated. Yakelis was able to get an IV going yesterday but it fell out during the night and because the baby was without IV for several hours, it dropped back into it's previous state. Hopefully they will be able to find a vein again but doing so is incredibly difficult because of the infant's small size.
Friday morning we were met with a giant stack of charts as both Dr. Jackie and the Cuban doctor were out today. We've never seen so many patients on a Friday! In fact, the whole week has been steadily busy. One patient of interest on Friday was a four year old boy that had been dropped on his head while he was an infant. He had petit mal seizures and was also microcephalic. His development was really delayed and he appeared to not speak more than a few words. It's so sad to see a kid like that who just doesn't get the care he needs. We were referring him to a neurologist in San Pedro, but who knows if he'll actually end up going.
On a brighter note we've seen so many happy and healthy children through the clinic this week, just getting routine check-ups. On Friday we had almost entirely little girls, including a set of 9 month year old twins that were absolutely gorgeous. There's nothing better to cheer you up than holding a plump, healthy, giggling, slobbery baby