Thursday, June 18, 2015

Día de los Padres


Here in Perú we celebrate both Mother and Father’s day similar to back home and on the same dates. The tradition at the health clinic is there is usually a small party for both holidays. This coming Father’s Day we will work a half-day on Saturday and then all the woman and single men will set up and cook for the party. We give small gifts to all the fathers and have a nice lunch followed by some drinks, music and dancing. In Perú music is a must and it seems to me is always played at the highest volume no matter the time of day.

Since coming back to mission in 2014 now as a father of our son Charlie, life has a different view. I enjoy the fact that often I am taking care of Charlie while Toni takes call in the hospital. I often walk him in the stroller through town or go to the soccer field to play and watch the soccer and volleyball games during the afternoons when the rains have taken a siesta.  We have father and son time that I might not otherwise have with the work schedule back in the U.S. Charlie is now almost two and is much more active and now able to run around and play with all the little kids his age in town.  

Being a father I now understand the work of caring, providing, and guiding your family and children. I recently have been happily surprised, as I have become more aware of how fathers are interacting in their family here in the culture of the Napo River. Last week on rounds in the early morning hours I was attending to several kids with pneumonia and/or severe wheezing from respiratory illnesses. As I finished with my last patient I walked to work on the clinic notes and orders smiling. The last 3 kids I saw were all being cared for and supervised by the father. A role not usually taken up by the father, but one that all three men were doing with ease in caring lovingly for their children. All had good questions for me as to how to take care of them upon their return home or thanking us because their child is notably improving.

We recently had a father come from 6 hours up river with his daughter who has been having convulsions for a little more than a year. After the natural remedies and first medication given in the local health post did not work he decided to come to Santa Clotilde. His daughter was obviously having seizures and we started some medications to help, but did not stop them entirely. We also were limited on diagnostic tests needed to find the cause of her seizures so we discussed with the father the need to travel to Iquitos, another 6 hours away on boat for a CT scan and an EEG (electroencephalogram-which studies brainwaves to identify the location of the seizure causing lesion).  He responded happily that if we were able to help with the transport and costs he would go; as all he wanted was his daughter to be healthy. They came back after 2 weeks of tests in Iquitos and he joyously told us his daughter is well on the medication and has not seized in over one week. She has a form of epilepsy and had a normal CT scan. She has follow up in Iquitos which the father said he will be ready to travel again in a month because he sees his daughter healthy and wants her “to be normal again like she is now”

Life on the Napo is hard for all and I am very proud to see the fathers caring for their family’s by going to plant and harvest food in their chakra (small plots of land), building their thatched roof houses, leaving at 3am to go fish to provide for their families and also in helping with their care by bringing them to their visits and caring for them in the hospital.  I wish them and all of you back home a Happy Father’s Day.  God Bless

Thursday, January 1, 2015

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Thank you Dr. Wayne Farmer

 


I'd like to take time to thank Doctor Wayne, a humble, smart, compassionate pulmonologist, who came as a volunteer through Mission Doctors Association for over 6 weeks. 


From the moment he arrived, Dr. Wayne went right to work, stepping foot off of a 5 hour boat ride and into the clinic. His first patients were a family of 5 children whose mother was diagnosed with active tuberculosis.


It was serendipity  that he arrived within a weeks of a few newly diagnosed patients with TB, as well as others with hemoptysis and allergic lung disease. What an amazing asset to have, being that we are surrounded by patients with lung disease! Above, Dr. Wayne is precepting Ray Mendez, a forth year Loyola student who was here volunteering, for the second time actually.


We did spend some time exploring too. Thanks to Dr. Wayne's yearning for adventure, we took a trip to Huiririma. We started with a hike through the jungle, much of which Charlie slept on Carlisle's shoulder



Dr. Farmer leads the way, and I stick close behind Carlisle, on guard for mosquitos landing on Charlie and keeping him protected from the sun (with his cool hat from Auntie Erica)




He loved looking at the expansive canopy, chattering birds, muddy puddles, mushrooms growing off rotting downed trees, and ferns sprouting from every crevice. 



We arrived at Manolo's (a co-worker's) aunt's house, and she offered to prep and cook the fish that we brought for lunch, and then provided us with boiled plantains to complement the delicious fish soup. Thank you also to Colin and Afshan, in the right of the picture below who were visiting from UCLA. 
Below is Manolo's family relaxing in the afternoon heat after working over their wood burning stove to cook the food.



We love getting away to Huiririma, and although it's often only a for a few hours, to swim and relax and boat on the tranquil Napo is good for the soul!